Here we demonstrate that intermittently sun-exposed human skin contains an extensive number of phenotypically intact cell compartments bearing missense and nonsense mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor gene. Deep sequencing of sun-exposed and shielded microdissected skin from mid-life individuals revealed that persistent p53 mutations had accumulated in 14% of all epidermal cells, with no apparent signs of a growth advantage of the affected cell compartments. Furthermore, 6% of the mutated epidermal cells encoded a truncated protein. The abundance of these events, not taking into account intron mutations and mutations in other genes that also may have functional implications, suggests an extensive tolerance of human cells to severe genetic...
Normal sun-exposed skin contains numerous epidermal patches that stain positive for p53 protein (p53...
How somatic mutations accumulate in normal cells is central to understanding cancer development but ...
p53 is the most commonly mutated gene in the progression from healthy skin to non-melanocytic skin c...
Mutation of the p53 gene appears to be an early event in skin cancer development. The present study ...
The photons of sunlight begin a series of genetic events in skin leading to cancer. UV signature mut...
Sun-exposed skin of Caucasians harbors thousands of p53-mutated clones, which are clinically invisib...
Sun-damaged skin is a relevant target tissue for studying the development of skin cancer. The aim of...
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a potent human carcinogen and it induces skin cancer in experimental a...
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a potent human carcinogen and it induces skin cancer in experimental a...
p53 expression was studied immunohistochemically to identify a precursor lesion of basal cell carcin...
International audienceThe p53 gene is mutated in numerous human cancers. We used it as a molecular t...
It has been suggested that p53 plays an important role in skin carcinogenesis. The p21 molecule acts...
Human skin is continuously exposed to environmental DNA damage leading to the accumulation of somati...
Aberrations of the p53 gene in 27 solar keratoses were examined by the polymerase chain reaction and...
How somatic mutations accumulate in normal cells is central to understanding cancer development but ...
Normal sun-exposed skin contains numerous epidermal patches that stain positive for p53 protein (p53...
How somatic mutations accumulate in normal cells is central to understanding cancer development but ...
p53 is the most commonly mutated gene in the progression from healthy skin to non-melanocytic skin c...
Mutation of the p53 gene appears to be an early event in skin cancer development. The present study ...
The photons of sunlight begin a series of genetic events in skin leading to cancer. UV signature mut...
Sun-exposed skin of Caucasians harbors thousands of p53-mutated clones, which are clinically invisib...
Sun-damaged skin is a relevant target tissue for studying the development of skin cancer. The aim of...
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a potent human carcinogen and it induces skin cancer in experimental a...
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a potent human carcinogen and it induces skin cancer in experimental a...
p53 expression was studied immunohistochemically to identify a precursor lesion of basal cell carcin...
International audienceThe p53 gene is mutated in numerous human cancers. We used it as a molecular t...
It has been suggested that p53 plays an important role in skin carcinogenesis. The p21 molecule acts...
Human skin is continuously exposed to environmental DNA damage leading to the accumulation of somati...
Aberrations of the p53 gene in 27 solar keratoses were examined by the polymerase chain reaction and...
How somatic mutations accumulate in normal cells is central to understanding cancer development but ...
Normal sun-exposed skin contains numerous epidermal patches that stain positive for p53 protein (p53...
How somatic mutations accumulate in normal cells is central to understanding cancer development but ...
p53 is the most commonly mutated gene in the progression from healthy skin to non-melanocytic skin c...