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  • Title: A comparative study of P53/MDM2 genes alterations and P53/MDM2 proteins immunoreactivity in soft-tissue sarcomas.
    Author: Rieske P, Bartkowiak JK, Szadowska AM, Olborski B, Harezga-Bal B, Debiec-Rychter M.
    Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res; 1999 Sep; 18(3):403-16. PubMed ID: 10606188.
    Abstract:
    In the present study, the expression of P53 and MDM2 proteins were examined in 94 soft-tissue sarcomas (35 malignant fibrohistiocytomas, 15 neurosarcomas, 14 liposarcomas, 13 leiomyosarcomas, 11 fibrosarcomas and 6 dermatofibrosarcomas) by immunohistochemistry. The immunohistochemical findings were correlated with P53 mutation analysis using PCR-SSCP, PCR-HDF and direct sequencing, and MDM2 amplification studies by differential PCR. P53 immunopositivity was found in 25 out of 94 (26.6%) cases. Alterations of the P53 gene were detected in 12 (12.8%) tumors; eight of these tumors revealed P53 immunoreactivity. A high number of P53 positive and P53 mutated tumors were histologically defined as poorly differentiated G3 (64.0% and 75.0%, respectively). MDM2 immunopositivity was revealed in 36 out of 94 (38.3%) cases. MDM2 amplification occurred in 17 tumors (18.1%); only nine of these tumors exhibited MDM2 immunoreactivity. Overall, MDM2 positivity was not associated with MDM2 amplification in 27 out of 94 tumors (28.7%). There was no significant correlation between MDM2 overexpression and histological grade. However, when the samples were stratified by immunophenotype, the majority of tumors (52.5%) with isolated MDM2 overexpression (dissociated from P53 positivity) were defined histologically as low grade (G1 + G2). These results support the notion that besides P53 alterations, MDM2 gene deregulation seems to be an important event in sarcomas evolution. Additionally, the mechanism of MDM2-mediated degradation of P53 protein, without involving stabilization and inactivation of P53 gene, should be considered for better understanding of all features of tumor progression processes.
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