One such mechanism involves a protein called p53. Often dubbed the "guardian of the genome," this protein plays a pivotal role in ensuring that your cells grow, divide and die in an orderly fashion.
No one really understands why activation of the tumor suppressor p53 sometimes leads to cell-cycle arrest and sometimes induces an apoptotic program. It has been proposed that post-translational ...
Figure 8: Regulation of ALDH3A1 and NECTIN4 by p53. Researchers Jessica J. Miciak, Lucy Petrova, Rhythm Sajwan, Aditya Pandya, Mikayla Deckard, Andrew J. Munoz, and Fred Bunz from the Sidney ...
phosphorylated synthetic peptide: H K K L M F K T E G P D S D, corresp. to C- terminal aa 380-393 of human p53 ...
Activation of p53 also promotes an anti-tumour immune response ... a phase I trial of BI 907828 in combination with the anti-PD-1 antibody ezabenlimab (BI 754091). Building on these phase I ...
A new research paper was published in Oncotarget, Volume 16, on February 18, 2025, titled "Robust p53 phenotypes and prospective downstream targets in telomerase-immortalized human cells.
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Novel Co-STAR cells show promise in targeting and eradicating cancerThe TCR and antibody components served as an "invader ... Their specific target was a peptide containing the R175H mutation of p53 (the 175th amino acid of p53 is mutated from arginine to ...
The University of Melbourne and affiliated organizations presented the development of a new reporter mouse model designed to study the role of MDM2 and its transcriptional regulation in p53-mediated ...
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