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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Loss of p21 protein in a dog with benign multicentric melanoma

By Ritt, M G et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·1998·Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Functional loss of p21/Waf-1 in a case of benign canine multicentric melanoma.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with multiple skin growths was found to have benign melanoma, which are non-cancerous tumors. Tests showed that the tumor cells lacked certain proteins (p21/Waf-1 and p53) that normally help control cell growth, suggesting a mutation may have caused this issue. While the tumors themselves didn't produce these proteins, normal tissue nearby did, indicating that the dog's body still had some healthy cells. Understanding this loss of function in these proteins could help explain how these benign tumors develop in dogs.

People also search for: dog skin growths treatment · benign melanoma in dogs · why does my dog have skin tumors

Abstract

Mutations of tumor suppressor genes remove mechanisms that normally arrest proliferation of transformed cells, resulting in tumor formation. The p53 gene product functions as a tumor suppressor that induces p21/Waf-1, the 21-kDa product of the waf-1/cip-1/mda-6 gene. p21/Waf-1 is a pan-cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor that arrests cell cycle progression under a variety of circumstances. We examined tissues from a dog with multiple primary pigmented proliferative lesions (benign, multicentric melanoma consisting of three distinct dermal lesions and a matrical cyst) for p21/Waf-1 and p53 expression by immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting. p21/Waf-1 and p-53 proteins were undetectable in the tumor cells and in the cyst but were present in adjacent normal tissues. Abundant cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (Cdk4), a protein related functionally to p21/Waf-1, also was present in the cyst. A somatic mutation of the waf-1 gene or of the p53 gene may have resulted in the loss of p21/Waf-1 expression in a common precursor of pigment-producing cells from the affected dog. Furthermore, this functional loss of p21/Waf-1 may play an important role in the genesis of canine benign melanoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9539362/