p53 Activation Paradoxically Causes Liver Cancer
- PMID: 35971677
- DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-2065
p53 Activation Paradoxically Causes Liver Cancer
Abstract
Activation of p53 regulates a transcriptional program that can cause cell cycle arrest, senescence, apoptosis, and ferroptosis, which are potent tumor suppressive mechanisms. Unexpectedly, Makino and colleagues show in this issue of Cancer Research that the constitutive activation of p53 in murine hepatocytes leads to tumor development. Detailed analyses indicate that p53 activation leads to loss of hepatocytes, increased expression of chemokines and humoral factors, and expansion of the hepatic progenitor cell population. These progenitor cells are highly proliferative, show chromosomal instability, and eventually transform. In chronic liver disease in humans, activation of p53 is associated with increased liver cancer development. This study highlights the complexity and non-cell autonomous nature of the physiologic p53 response. See related article by Makino et al., p. 2860.
©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.
Comment on
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Constitutive Activation of the Tumor Suppressor p53 in Hepatocytes Paradoxically Promotes Non-Cell Autonomous Liver Carcinogenesis.Cancer Res. 2022 Aug 16;82(16):2860-2873. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-4390. Cancer Res. 2022. PMID: 35696550 Free PMC article.
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