4.6 Review

The Role of p53 Dysfunction in Colorectal Cancer and Its Implication for Therapy

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102296

Keywords

colorectal cancer; p53; systemic therapy; immunotherapy; tumor microenvironment (TME); cancer-associated fibroblasts; signaling; targeted therapy

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Funding

  1. Clinician Scientist Fellowship Else Kroner Research College [2018_Kolleg.05]
  2. Clinician Scientist Fellowship of the Mainz Research School of Translational Biomedicine

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Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a common and deadly cancer globally, characterized by a stepwise accumulation of mutations leading to oncogene activation or tumor suppressor gene deactivation. Mutations in p53 have significant implications in therapy, treatment response, and personalized medicine for CRC patients.
Simple Summary Despite remarkable progress being made by preventive medical check-ups in the last decades, colorectal cancer (CRC) remains one of the most frequent and deadliest cancers worldwide. An understanding of the mutational landscape in CRC is needed to develop new mutanome-directed therapies with stronger efficacy and less side-effects than current therapeutic standard regimes. Carcinogenesis in CRC is a multi-gene driven process, where premalignant cells accumulate successively key tumorigenesis-related mutations. Here, inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene p53 is a hallmark event during tumorigenesis. Mutations of p53 impact the prognosis of patients, enabling the use of targeted therapies such as immune therapy. Alterations of p53 affect not only the tumor biology of cancer cells but also the surrounding tumor microenvironment (TME). Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common and fatal cancers worldwide. The carcinogenesis of CRC is based on a stepwise accumulation of mutations, leading either to an activation of oncogenes or a deactivation of suppressor genes. The loss of genetic stability triggers activation of proto-oncogenes (e.g., KRAS) and inactivation of tumor suppression genes, namely TP53 and APC, which together drive the transition from adenoma to adenocarcinoma. On the one hand, p53 mutations confer resistance to classical chemotherapy but, on the other hand, they open the door for immunotherapy, as p53-mutated tumors are rich in neoantigens. Aberrant function of the TP53 gene product, p53, also affects stromal and non-stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment. Cancer-associated fibroblasts together with other immunosuppressive cells become valuable assets for the tumor by p53-mediated tumor signaling. In this review, we address the manifold implications of p53 mutations in CRC regarding therapy, treatment response and personalized medicine.

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