Transfection of the wt p53 gene into the p53 mutant and highly tumorigenic BL-41 cell line caused it to acquire wt p53 function and rendered it less tumorigenic in mice.
The present study assessed the role of the p53 tumor suppressor gene in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis following treatment of Burkitt's lymphoma and lymphoblastoid cell lines with gamma-rays, etoposide, nitrogen mustard, and cisplatin.
Combined loss of p53 induction and function due to miRNA-mediated regulation of ATM and NLK, together with the upregulation of TFAP4, may be a central role for human miRNAs in eBL oncogenesis.
We have shown here that in 70% of Burkitt lymphoma cell lines, but not in normal EBV transformed B cell lines, p53 protein is readily detectable by Western blot analysis using either an antibody directed against the 240 epitope or an antibody against wild-type p53.
Recent work has shown that p53 gene mutations are frequently found in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-positive and EBV-negative cases of Burkitt's lymphoma but not in EBV-associated undifferentiated nasopharyngeal carcinomas (NPCs).
These results suggest that (i) significant differences in the frequency of p53 mutations are present among subtypes of neoplasms derived from the same tissue; (ii) p53 may play a role in tumor progression in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia; (iii) the presence of both p53 loss/inactivation and c-myc oncogene activation may be important in the pathogenesis of Burkitt lymphoma and its leukemic form L3-type B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
The role of inactivation of tumor-suppressor loci is best exemplified by the frequent inactivation of p53 in Burkitt's lymphoma and by the recurrent deletion of 6q25-q27 and 6q21-q23 in intermediate- and high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, respectively.
Our results showed that BL cell lines have variable response to DNA-damaging agents that cannot be correlated exclusively with p53 mutation or survivin expression suggesting that p53-independent transactivation may play a role in apoptosis induced by DNA-damaging agents.
We selected a group of 16 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) in order to investigate the presence of p53 mutations.
Studies in eight Burkitt's lymphoma and lymphoblastoid cell lines (four wild-type p53 and four mutant p53 cell lines) revealed that the DNA-damaging agents assayed tended to exhibit less growth inhibition in the mutant p53 cell lines compared to the wild-type p53 cell lines.
INZ(c) treatment decreased c-Myc expression at both mRNA and protein level, and suppressed c-Myc transcriptional activity in human Burkitt's lymphoma Raji cells with mutant p53.
Activation of endogenous wt p53 in BLs and lymphoblastoid cell lines led to the induction of SAP and this was inhibited by the specific p53 inhibitor pifithrin-alpha.
Our results indicate that the p53 gene is mutated in a majority of Burkitt lymphoma cell lines (BLs), and suggest that p53 mutation contributes to the malignant phenotype of these cell lines.