Alterations of p14ARF, p53, and p73 genes involved in the E2F-1-mediated apoptotic pathways in non-small cell lung carcinoma

Siobhan A. Nicholson, Nader T. Okby, Mohammed A. Khan, Judith A. Welsh, Mary G. McMenamin, William D. Travis, James R. Jett, Henry D. Tazelaar, Victor Trastek, Peter C. Pairolero, Paul G. Corn, James G. Herman, Lance A. Liotta, Neil E. Caporaso, Curtis C. Harris

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Scopus citations

Abstract

Overexpression of E2F-1 induces apoptosis by both a p14ARF-p53- and a p73-mediated pathway. p14ARF is the alternate tumor suppressor product of the 1NK4a/ARF locus that is inactivated frequently in lung carcinogenesis. Because p14ARF stabilizes p53, it has been proposed that the loss of p14ARF is functionally equivalent to a p53 mutation. We have tested this hypothesis by examining the genomic status of the unique exon 1β of p14ARF in 53 human cell lines and 86 primary non-small cell lung carcinomas and correlated this with previously characterized alterations of p53. Homozygous deletions of p14ARF were detected in 12 of 53 (23%) cell lines and 16 of 86 (19%) primary tumors. A single cell line, but no primary tumors, harbored an intragenic mutation. The deletion of p14ARF was inversely correlated with the loss of p53 in the majority of cell lines (P = 0.02), but this relationship was not maintained among primary tumors (P = 0.5). E2F-1 can also induce p73 via a p53-independent apoptotic pathway. Although we did not observe inactivation of p73 by either mutation or DNA methylation, haploinsufficiency of p73 correlated positively with either p14ARF or p53 mutation or both (P = 0.01) in primary non-small cell lung carcinomas. These data are consistent with the current model of p14ARF and p53 interaction as a complex network rather than a simple linear pathway and indicate a possible role for an E2F-1-mediated failsafe, p53-independent, apoptotic pathway involving p73 in human lung carcinogenesis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)5636-5643
Number of pages8
JournalCancer research
Volume61
Issue number14
StatePublished - Jul 15 2001

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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