Why are some tumor suppressor genes upregulate in tumors or oncogenes downregulate?
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2.8 years ago
Zahra ▴ 110

Hi all,

I have differential expression analyzed by raw counts of TCGA. In numerous cancer types, I have found that some tumor suppressor genes like TP53 have upregulated in tumor cells, and as I know this is in contrast to the antitumor function of this gene. There is the same contradictory behavior for oncogenes. Why does this happen in tumors? Is there a reason other than mutated genes?

Thanks for any help

TP53 oncogenes • 663 views
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2.8 years ago

This has been commonly observed. Mutated forms of tumor suppressors can behave as tumour promoters. For example some TP53 mutants act as inhibitors of wild-type TP53. Read for example Tumor Suppressors Having Oncogenic Functions: The Double Agents. Also tumor suppressor genes could be expressed in response to normal signals but be inactive due to change of context (e.g. proliferating tumor cell vs quiescent wild-type) or mutations (in them or in downstream effectors). Another possibility is that the stability of the protein has been affected so levels are higher than in wild-type cells. I am sure I am forgetting other explanations but the literature should be full of examples.

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