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Title: p16/p14(ARF) cell cycle regulatory pathways in primary neuroblastoma: p16 expression is associated with advanced stage disease. Author: Omura-Minamisawa M, Diccianni MB, Chang RC, Batova A, Bridgeman LJ, Schiff J, Cohn SL, London WB, Yu AL. Journal: Clin Cancer Res; 2001 Nov; 7(11):3481-90. PubMed ID: 11705866. Abstract: p16 regulates the G(1)-S cell cycle transition by inhibiting the cyclin D-cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)4/CDK6-mediated phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein (pRb). We examined the possible derangement of the p16-CDK/cyclin D-pRb pathway in 40 primary neuroblastomas including 18 samples in the unfavorable stages (C and D) and 22 in the favorable stages (A, B, and Ds) by PCR, reverse transcription-PCR, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry and correlated the results with clinical outcome. No samples harbored alterations of the p16 gene. Interestingly, the samples in the unfavorable stages exhibited expression of p16 mRNA and protein more frequently than those in the favorable stages [mRNA, 9 of 18 (50%) versus 2 of 22 (9%), P = 0.006; protein, 5 of 16 (31%) versus 0 of 18 (0%), P = 0.013]. Alterations of the downstream components of the pathway were infrequent. pRb was deregulated in the majority of samples investigated [27 of 33 (82%), 24 with hyperphosphorylated pRb and 3 with no pRb protein]. The phosphorylation status of pRb did not correlate with p16 protein expression, suggesting that the elevated p16 protein may not be functioning properly to regulate the pathway. Among patients of all stages, p16 expression was significantly associated with a lower overall survival. There was no overexpression of MDM2, and loss of p14(ARF) expression and p53 mutation were infrequent events. Taken together, these findings suggest that up-regulated p16 expression may represent a unique feature of aggressive neuroblastoma.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]