England Bryant, Huang Tiangui, Karsy Michael
Department of Neurosurgery, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA.
Tumour Biol. 2013 Aug;34(4):2063-74. doi: 10.1007/s13277-013-0871-3. Epub 2013 Jun 5.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary malignancy in the brain and confers a uniformly poor prognosis. Despite decades of research on the topic, limited progress has been made to improve the poor survival associated with this disease. GBM arises de novo (primary GBM) or via dedifferentiation of lower grade glioma (secondary GBM). While distinct mutations are predominant in each subtype, alterations of tumor suppressor p53 are the most common, seen in 25-30 % of primary GBM and 60-70 % of secondary GBM. Various roles of p53 that protect against neoplastic transformation include modulation of cell cycle, DNA repair, apoptosis, senescence, angiogenesis, and metabolism, resulting in an extremely complex signaling network. Mutations of p53 in GBM are most common in the DNA-binding domain, namely within six hotspot mutation sites (codons 175, 245, 248, 249, 273, and 282). These alterations generally result in loss-of-function, gain-of-function, and dominant-negative mutational effects for p53, however, the distinct effect of these mutation types in GBM pathogenesis remain unclear. Signaling alterations downstream from p53 (e.g., MDM2, MDM4, INK4/ARF), p53 isoforms (e.g., p63, p73), and microRNAs (e.g., miR-34) also play critical roles in modulating the p53 pathway. Despite novel mouse models of GBM showing that p53 combined with other mutation generate tumors de novo, the role of p53 as a molecular marker of GBM remains controversial with most studies failing to show an association with prognosis. Regarding treatment in GBM, p53 targeted-gene therapy and vaccinations have reached phase I clinical trials while therapeutic drugs are still in preclinical development. This review aims to discuss the most recent findings regarding the impact of p53 mutations on GBM pathogenesis, prognosis, and treatment.
多形性胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是最常见的原发性脑恶性肿瘤,预后普遍较差。尽管对此进行了数十年的研究,但在改善与该疾病相关的低生存率方面进展有限。GBM可原发产生(原发性GBM)或由低级别胶质瘤去分化形成(继发性GBM)。虽然每种亚型中都有不同的主要突变,但肿瘤抑制因子p53的改变最为常见,在25%-30%的原发性GBM和60%-70%的继发性GBM中可见。p53防止肿瘤转化的各种作用包括调节细胞周期、DNA修复、细胞凋亡、衰老、血管生成和代谢,从而形成一个极其复杂的信号网络。GBM中p53的突变最常见于DNA结合结构域,即在六个热点突变位点(密码子175、245、248、249、273和282)内。这些改变通常会导致p53功能丧失、功能获得和显性负性突变效应,然而,这些突变类型在GBM发病机制中的独特作用仍不清楚。p53下游的信号改变(如MDM2、MDM4、INK4/ARF)、p53异构体(如p63、p73)和微小RNA(如miR-34)在调节p53途径中也起着关键作用。尽管新的GBM小鼠模型表明p53与其他突变结合可原发产生肿瘤,但p53作为GBM分子标志物的作用仍存在争议,大多数研究未能表明其与预后相关。关于GBM的治疗,p53靶向基因治疗和疫苗接种已进入I期临床试验,而治疗药物仍处于临床前开发阶段。本综述旨在讨论关于p53突变对GBM发病机制、预后和治疗影响的最新研究结果。