Abstract

In many human cancers, p53 gene mutations are frequently occurring genetic abnormalities, which may be detected by immunohistochemical staining for p53 protein. In the present study, p53 immunoreactivity was investigated in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues from human and animal pituitary tumors, using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique. No p53 was detected in 3 nontumorous human adenohypophyses or in 40 human pituitary tumors including 5 GH cell adenomas, 10 PRL cell adenomas, 2 mixed GH cell-PRL cell adenomas, 2 acidophil stem cell adenomas, 8 ACTH cell adenomas, 1 TSH cell adenoma, 1 FSH/LH cell adenoma, 5 null cell adenomas, 5 oncocytomas, and 1 plurihormonal adenoma. Twenty nontumorous and hyperplastic pituitaries of hGRH transgenic mice and 8 tumors in these transgenic animals were immunonegative for p53. All pituitary tumors found in AVP/SV40 transgenic mice contained p53 immunoreactivity in the nuclei, while the nontumorous adenohypophysis of one such transgenic mouse was negative. It can be concluded that p53 mutations are apparently not involved in the pathogenesis of human pituitary adenomas or of the pituitary tumors which develop in hGRH transgenic mice. However, pituitary tumors in AVP/ SV40 transgenic mice are accompanied by p53 expression.

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