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Gain-of-function (GOF) mutant p53 as actionable therapeutic target

  • University of Göttingen

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

99 Scopus citations

Abstract

p53 missense mutant alleles are present in nearly 40% of all human tumors. Such mutated alleles generate aberrant proteins that not only lose their tumor-suppressive functions but also frequently act as driver oncogenes, which promote malignant progression, invasion, metastasis, and chemoresistance, leading to reduced survival in patients and mice. Notably, these oncogenic gain-of-function (GOF) missense mutant p53 proteins (mutp53) are constitutively and tumor-specific stabilised. This stabilisation is one key pre-requisite for their GOF and is largely due to mutp53 protection from the E3 ubiquitin ligases Mdm2 and CHIP by the HSP90/HDAC6 chaperone machinery. Recent mouse models provide convincing evidence that tumors with highly stabilized GOF mutp53 proteins depend on them for growth, maintenance, and metastasis, thus creating exploitable tumor-specific vulnerabilities that markedly increase lifespan if intercepted. This identifies mutp53 as a promising cancer-specific drug target. This review discusses direct mutp53 protein-targeting drug strategies that are currently being developed at various preclinical levels.

Original languageEnglish
Article number188
JournalCancers
Volume10
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 7 2018

Keywords

  • Drug therapy
  • Gain-of-function (GOF)
  • HSF1
  • HSP90
  • Missense p53
  • Mutant p53 (mutp53)
  • P53 loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH)

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