Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA 94305, USA.
Carcinogenesis. 2010 Aug;31(8):1311-8. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgp331. Epub 2010 Jan 22.
p53 is a crucial tumor suppressor, as evidenced by the high propensity for p53 mutation during human cancer development. Already more than a decade ago, p53 knockout mice confirmed that p53 is critical for preventing tumorigenesis. More recently, a host of p53 knock-in mouse strains has been generated, with the aim of either more precisely modeling p53 mutations in human cancer or better understanding p53's regulation and downstream activities. In the first category, several mouse strains expressing mutant p53 proteins corresponding to human-tumor-derived mutants have demonstrated that mutant p53 is not equivalent to loss of p53 but additionally exhibits gain-of-function properties, promoting invasive and metastatic phenotypes. The second class of p53 knock-in mouse models expressing engineered p53 mutants has also provided new insight into p53 function. For example, mice expressing p53 mutants lacking specific posttranslational modification sites have revealed that these modifications serve to modulate p53 responses in vivo in a cell-type- and stress-specific manner rather than being absolutely required for p53 stabilization and activation as suggested by in vitro experiments. Additionally, studies of p53 mouse models have established that both p53-driven cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis responses contribute to tumor suppression and that activation of p53 by oncogenic stress imposes an important barrier to tumorigenesis. Finally, the use of mouse strains expressing temporally regulatable p53 has demonstrated that p53 loss is not only required for tumor development but also required for tumor maintenance, suggesting that p53 restoration in human cancer patients may be a promising therapeutic strategy. These sophisticated p53 mouse models have taught us important lessons, and new mouse models will certainly continue to reveal interesting and perhaps surprising aspects of p53's complex biology.
p53 是一种关键的肿瘤抑制因子,这一点从人类癌症发展过程中 p53 突变的高倾向就可以得到证明。早在十多年前,p53 敲除小鼠就证实了 p53 对于预防肿瘤发生至关重要。最近,已经产生了许多 p53 敲入小鼠品系,其目的是更精确地模拟人类癌症中的 p53 突变,或者更好地理解 p53 的调控和下游活性。在第一类中,几种表达对应于人类肿瘤衍生突变体的突变 p53 蛋白的小鼠品系表明,突变 p53 不等同于 p53 缺失,而是具有额外的功能获得特性,促进侵袭和转移表型。表达工程化 p53 突变体的第二类 p53 敲入小鼠模型也为 p53 功能提供了新的见解。例如,表达缺乏特定翻译后修饰位点的 p53 突变体的小鼠表明,这些修饰以细胞类型和应激特异性的方式调节体内的 p53 反应,而不是如体外实验所暗示的那样绝对需要 p53 稳定和激活。此外,对 p53 小鼠模型的研究表明,p53 驱动的细胞周期停滞和细胞凋亡反应都有助于肿瘤抑制,并且致癌应激激活 p53 对肿瘤发生构成了重要障碍。最后,使用表达可调控的 p53 的小鼠品系表明,p53 缺失不仅是肿瘤发展所必需的,而且也是肿瘤维持所必需的,这表明在人类癌症患者中恢复 p53 可能是一种有前途的治疗策略。这些复杂的 p53 小鼠模型为我们提供了重要的教训,并且新的小鼠模型肯定会继续揭示 p53 复杂生物学中有趣且可能令人惊讶的方面。