Abstract A14: The p53R172H gain-of-function mutation promotes resistance to oral cancer immunoprevention

Author(s):  
Jin Wang ◽  
Yuan Hu ◽  
Cassandra Gonzalez ◽  
Lin Tang ◽  
Bingbing Wang ◽  
...  
Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1471
Author(s):  
Jin Wang ◽  
Yuan Hu ◽  
Vicente Escamilla-Rivera ◽  
Cassandra L. Gonzalez ◽  
Lin Tang ◽  
...  

Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) develops through the multistep malignant progression of squamous epithelium. This process can be prevented by PD-1 blockade in a mouse model for oral carcinogenesis. OSCCs exhibit a high incidence of p53 mutations that confer oncogenic gain-of-function (GOF) activities that promote resistance to standard therapies and poor clinical outcomes. To determine whether epithelial p53 mutations modulate anti-PD-1-mediated oral cancer immunoprevention, we generated mouse models for oral carcinogenesis by exposing mice carrying epithelial-specific p53 mutations to the carcinogen 4NQO. Consistent with the oncogenic functions of mutant p53, mice with OSCCs expressing the p53R172H GOF mutation developed higher metastasis rates than mice with loss-of-function (LOF) p53 deletion or with wild-type p53. Throughout oral cancer progression, pre-invasive and invasive lesions showed a gradual increase in T-cell infiltration, recruitment of immunosuppressive regulatory T-cells (Tregs), and induction of PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint proteins. Notably, while PD-1 blockade prevented the development of OSCCs in mice with wild-type p53 or p53 deletion, GOF p53R172H abrogated the immunopreventive effects of anti-PD-1, associated with upregulation of IL17 signaling and depletion of exhausted CD8 cells in the microenvironment of the p53R172H tumors. These findings sustain a potential role for p53 profiling in personalized oral cancer immunoprevention.


Author(s):  
Karvita B. Ahluwalia ◽  
Nidhi Sharma

It is common knowledge that apparently similar tumors often show different responses to therapy. This experience has generated the idea that histologically similar tumors could have biologically distinct behaviour. The development of effective therapy therefore, has the explicit challenge of understanding biological behaviour of a tumor. The question is which parameters in a tumor could relate to its biological behaviour ? It is now recognised that the development of malignancy requires an alteration in the program of terminal differentiation in addition to aberrant growth control. In this study therefore, ultrastructural markers that relate to defective terminal differentiation and possibly invasive potential of cells have been identified in human oral leukoplakias, erythroleukoplakias and squamous cell carcinomas of the tongue.


2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Robert Finn
Keyword(s):  

Oral Diseases ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-66
Author(s):  
Bernard McCartan
Keyword(s):  

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