In summary, AGG stimulates p73 in restricting EGF-induced EMT, invasiveness, and stemness by inhibiting the ERK/Snail pathway to facilitate the development of alternative therapeutics for oral cancer.
To explore the role of polymorphisms of p53-related genes in etiology of oral cancer, we investigated joint effects of seven putatively functional polymorphisms of p53 (codon 72 Arg/Pro), p73 (4/14 GC/AT), murine double minute 2 gene (MDM2; A2164G and T2580G) and MDM4 (rs11801299 G > A, rs10900598 G > T and rs1380576 C > G) on risk of human papillomavirus (HPV)16-associated oral cancer in a case-control study with 325 cases and 335 cancer-free controls.
Stratification of the study population into subgroups with different tobacco habits showed that the risk of the oral cancer is not modified further for the individuals carrying p73 risk genotype.
HPV16 seropositivity was also associated with an significantly increased risk of oral cancer in all three risk groups with combined genotypes [adjusted ORs (95% CIs) were 2.28 (1.15-4.54) for p53 Arg/Arg and p73 GC/GC, the low-risk group; 3.97 (2.14-7.36) for p53 Arg/Arg and p73 AT carriers or p53 Pro carriers and p73 GC/GC, the medium-risk group and 5.11 (2.00-13.0) for p53 Pro carriers and p73 AT carriers, the high-risk group].
The data suggest that p73 expression may be (1) associated with the differentiation of oral stratified squamous epithelium, (2) an early event in human oral carcinogenesis, and (3) associated with the nodal status of patients with oral carcinoma and a possible indicator for malignant change of oral ED.