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Elevated expression of p53 in early colon polyps in a pig model of human familial adenomatous polyposis.

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is a hereditary predisposition to formation of colon polyps that can progress to colorectal cancer (CRC). The severity of polyposis varies substantially within families bearing the same germline mutation in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumour suppressor gene. The progressive step-wise accumulation of genetic events in tumour suppressor genes and oncogenes leads to oncogenic transformation, with driver alterations in the tumour protein p53 (TP53) gene playing a key role in advanced stage CRC. We analysed groups of pigs carrying a truncating mutation in APC (APC1311/+ ; orthologous to human APC1309/+ ) to study the influence of TP53 polymorphisms and expression on the frequency of polyp formation and polyp progression in early-stage FAP. Five generations of APC1311/+ pigs were examined by colonoscopy for polyposis severity and development. A total of 19 polymorphisms were found in 5'-flanking, coding, and 3' untranslated regions of TP53. The distribution of TP53 genotypes did not differ between APC1311/+ pigs with low (LP) and high (HP) number of colon polyps. p53 mRNA expression was analysed in distally located normal mucosa samples of wild-type pigs, APC1311/+ LP and HP pigs, and also in distally located polyp samples histologically classified as low-grade (LG-IEN) and high-grade intraepithelial dysplastic (HG-IEN) from APC1311/+ pigs. p53 mRNA expression was found to be significantly elevated in HG-IEN compared to LG-IEN samples (p = 0.012), suggesting a role for p53 in the early precancerous stages of polyp development.

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