Despite extensive studies on the role of tumor suppressor p53 protein and its homologues, p73 and p63, following their overexpression or cellular stress, very little is known about the regulation of the three proteins in cells during physiologic cell cycle progression. We report a role for p73 and p63 in supporting cellular proliferation through the transcriptional activation of the genes involved in G(1)-S and G(2)-M progression. We found that in MCF-7 cells, p73 and p63, but not p53, are modulated during the cell cycle with a peak in S phase, and their silencing determines a significant suppression of proliferation compared with the control. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis shows that in cycling cells, p73 and p63 are bound to the p...
The cause or consequence of overexpression of p73 (refs 1, 2), the structural and functional homolo...
MDM2, one of the transcriptional targets of p53, can target p53 for degradation in a negative feedba...
About half of all human tumors contain an inactivating mutation of p53, while in the remaining tumor...
Despite extensive studies on the role of tumor suppressor p53 protein and its homologues, p73 and p6...
Abstract During oncogenesis, cells become unrestrictedly proliferative thereby altering the tissue h...
The transcription factor and tumour suppressor p53 and its two homologues p63 and p73 form a family ...
p63, p73 and p53 compose a family of transcription factors involved in cell response to stress and d...
AbstractTP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63...
p73 is a p53 paralog that encodes proapoptotic (transactivation-competent (TA)) and antiapoptotic ( ...
The p53 gene is the most frequently mutated gene in human cancer. The identification of two homologu...
Initiation, progression and evasion are sequential steps in cancer formation, with autonomous cell p...
TP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63 and TP7...
TP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63 and TP7...
The cause or consequence of overexpression of p73 (refs 1, 2), the structural and functional homolo...
MDM2, one of the transcriptional targets of p53, can target p53 for degradation in a negative feedba...
About half of all human tumors contain an inactivating mutation of p53, while in the remaining tumor...
Despite extensive studies on the role of tumor suppressor p53 protein and its homologues, p73 and p6...
Abstract During oncogenesis, cells become unrestrictedly proliferative thereby altering the tissue h...
The transcription factor and tumour suppressor p53 and its two homologues p63 and p73 form a family ...
p63, p73 and p53 compose a family of transcription factors involved in cell response to stress and d...
AbstractTP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63...
p73 is a p53 paralog that encodes proapoptotic (transactivation-competent (TA)) and antiapoptotic ( ...
The p53 gene is the most frequently mutated gene in human cancer. The identification of two homologu...
Initiation, progression and evasion are sequential steps in cancer formation, with autonomous cell p...
TP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63 and TP7...
TP53 belongs to a small gene family that includes, in mammals, two additional paralogs, TP63 and TP7...
The cause or consequence of overexpression of p73 (refs 1, 2), the structural and functional homolo...
MDM2, one of the transcriptional targets of p53, can target p53 for degradation in a negative feedba...
About half of all human tumors contain an inactivating mutation of p53, while in the remaining tumor...