Mutant p53 Gain-of-Function in the Spotlight: Are We Suffering a GOF Delusion?
David P. Lane
Abstract
Mutant p53 proteins are often highly expressed in human cancers and have been thought to have oncogenic driver gain-of-function (GOF) properties. Wang and colleagues show, surprisingly, that this is not the case because removing the TP53-mutant gene from human and mouse cancer cells using CRISPR technology has no effect on cancer cell growth in vitro or in vivo. See related article by Wang et al., p. 362 (10) .
Topics & Concepts
Gain of functionMutantDelusionBiologyCancerFunction (biology)In vitroIn vivoCRISPRCancer cellGeneCancer researchCell biologyComputational biologyGeneticsMedicinePsychiatryCancer-related Molecular PathwaysCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering