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Hormonal control of p53 and chemoprevention
Breast Cancer Research (2002)
  • D. Joseph Jerry, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Lisa M Minter, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Klaus A Becker, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Anneke C Blackburn, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Abstract

Improvements in the detection and treatment of breast cancer have dramatically altered its clinical course and outcome. However, prevention of breast cancer remains an elusive goal. Parity, age of menarche, and age at menopause are major risk factors drawing attention to the important role of the endocrine system in determining the risk of breast cancer, while heritable breast cancer susceptibility syndromes have implicated tumor suppressor genes as important targets. Recent work demonstrating hormonal modulation of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway draws together these established determinants of risk to provide a model of developmental susceptibility to breast cancer. In this model, the mammary epithelium is rendered susceptible due to impaired p53 activity during specific periods of mammary gland development, but specific endocrine stimuli serve to activate p53 function and to mitigate this risk. The results focus attention on p53 as a molecular target for therapies to reduce the risk of breast cancer.

Keywords
  • chemoprevention,
  • estrogen,
  • p53,
  • progesterone,
  • susceptibility
Disciplines
Publication Date
March 26, 2002
Publisher Statement

This document was harvested from BioMed Central.

DOI: 10.1186/bcr431


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Citation Information
D. Joseph Jerry, Lisa M Minter, Klaus A Becker and Anneke C Blackburn. "Hormonal control of p53 and chemoprevention" Breast Cancer Research Vol. 4 (2002)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/djoseph_jerry/15/