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The Common Germline TP53-R337H Mutation Is Hypomorphic and Confers Incomplete Penetrance and Late Tumor Onset in a Mouse Model.

John R JeffersEmilia Modolo PintoJerold E RehgMichael R ClayJinling WangGeoffrey A NealeRichard J HeathGuillermina LozanoEnzo LalliBonald Cavalcante de FigueiredoAlberto S PappoCarlos Rodriguez-GalindoWenan ChenStanley PoundsRaul C RibeiroGerard P Zambetti
Published in: Cancer research (2021)
The TP53-R337H founder mutation exists at a high frequency throughout southern Brazil and represents one of the most common germline TP53 mutations reported to date. It was identified in pediatric adrenocortical tumors in families with a low incidence of cancer. The R337H mutation has since been found in association with early-onset breast cancers and Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS). To study this variability in tumor susceptibility, we generated a knockin mutant p53 mouse model (R334H). Endogenous murine p53-R334H protein was naturally expressed at high levels in multiple tissues and was functionally compromised in a tissue- and stress-specific manner. Mutant p53-R334H mice developed tumors with long latency and incomplete penetrance, consistent with many human carriers being at a low but elevated risk for cancer. These findings suggest the involvement of additional cooperating genetic alterations when TP53-R337H occurs in the context of LFS, which has important implications for genetic counseling and long-term clinical follow-up. SIGNIFICANCE: A p53-R334H knockin mouse serves as an important model for studying the most common inherited germline TP53 mutation (R337H) that is associated with variable tumor susceptibility.
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