p53 amyloid pathology is correlated with higher cancer grade irrespective of the mutant or wild-type form

Author:

Sengupta Shinjinee12ORCID,Singh Namrata1,Paul Ajoy1ORCID,Datta Debalina1ORCID,Chatterjee Debdeep1ORCID,Mukherjee Semanti1,Gadhe Laxmikant1ORCID,Devi Jyoti1,Mahesh Yeshwanth3,Jolly Mohit Kumar3ORCID,Maji Samir K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Indian Institute of Technology Bombay 1 Department of Bioscience and Bioengineering , , Mumbai 400076 , India

2. Amity Institute of Molecular Medicine and Stem Cell Research, Amity University Noida, Uttar Pradesh, 2 201303 , India

3. Centre for BioSystems Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Science Bengaluru 3 , Bengaluru, Karnataka 560012 , India

Abstract

ABSTRACT p53 (also known as TP53) mutation and amyloid formation are long associated with cancer pathogenesis; however, the direct demonstration of the link between p53 amyloid load and cancer progression is lacking. Using multi-disciplinary techniques and 59 tissues (53 oral and stomach cancer tumor tissue samples from Indian individuals with cancer and six non-cancer oral and stomach tissue samples), we showed that p53 amyloid load and cancer grades are highly correlated. Furthermore, next-generation sequencing (NGS) data suggest that not only mutant p53 (e.g. single-nucleotide variants, deletions, and insertions) but wild-type p53 also formed amyloids either in the nucleus (50%) and/or in the cytoplasm in most cancer tissues. Interestingly, in all these cancer tissues, p53 displays a loss of DNA-binding and transcriptional activities, suggesting that the level of amyloid load correlates with the degree of loss and an increase in cancer grades. The p53 amyloids also sequester higher amounts of the related p63 and p73 (also known as TP63 and TP73, respectively) protein in higher-grade tumor tissues. The data suggest p53 misfolding and/or aggregation, and subsequent amyloid formation, lead to loss of the tumor-suppressive function and the gain of oncogenic function, aggravation of which might determine the cancer grade.

Funder

Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India

Wadhwani Research Center for Bioengineering

Department of Science and Technology, Ministry of Science and Technology

The Wellcome Trust DBT India Alliance

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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