(American Journal of Pathology. 1999;154:313-323.)
© 1999 American Society for Investigative Pathology
p27kip1: A Multifunctional Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor with Prognostic Significance in Human Cancers
Ricardo V. Lloyd,
Lori A. Erickson,
Long Jin,
Elzbieta Kulig,
Xiang Qian,
John C. Cheville and
Bernd W. Scheithauer
From the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo
Foundation and Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota
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Abstract
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p27kip1 (p27) is a member of the universal
cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CDKI) family. p27 expression is
regulated by cell contact inhibition and by specific growth
factors, such as transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß. Since
the cloning of the p27 gene in 1994, a host of other functions
have been associated with this cell cycle protein. In addition to its
role as a CDKI, p27 is a putative tumor suppressor
gene, regulator of drug resistance in solid tumors, and
promoter of apoptosis; acts as a safeguard against inflammatory injury;
and has a role in cell differentiation. The level of p27 protein
expression decreases during tumor development and progression in some
epithelial, lymphoid, and endocrine tissues. This
decrease occurs mainly at the post-translational level with protein
degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. A large number of
studies have characterized p27 as an independent prognostic factor in
various human cancers, including breast, colon,
and prostate adenocarcinomas. Here we review the role of p27 in the
regulation of the cell cycle and other cell functions and as a
diagnostic and prognostic marker in human neoplasms. We also review
studies indicating the increasingly important roles of p27,
other CDKIs, and cyclins in endocrine cell hyperplasia and
tumor development.
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Introduction
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Recent studies have shown that cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinase
(CDK) complexes have important regulatory roles during cell cycle
progression1-7
(Figure 1
). Cyclin-CDK complexes are in turn regulated by the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs), which generally inhibit cell cycle progression (Table 1
). These proteins
fall into two families based on their structural and functional
properties. The INK4 group includes p16/INK4A (p16), p15/INK4B (p15),
p18/INK4C (p18), and p19/INK4D (p19). They all have four ankyrin
repeats and form complexes with CDK4
and/or CDK6 and the D-type cyclins. They have functional activities
that are dependent on the presence of a normal retinoblastoma
protein.8-10
Maximal expression of the INK4 proteins
occurs during the middle of the S phase in proliferating cells. Both
p15 and p16 show a high frequency of gene deletions, and various human
tumors and cell lines have mutations of the p16 gene, suggesting that
these genes may function as tumor suppressors.11-13

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Figure 1. Schematic view of mammalian cyclin-dependent kinase
(CDK) inhibitors and
cyclin-CDK complexes in the cell cycle. Members of the INK4 group
(p15/INK4B, p16/INK4A, p18/INK4C, and
p19/INK4D) and the Cip/Kip group
(p21, WAF/CIPI, p27/Kip1, and
p57/Kip2) have inhibitory roles in
G1 to S progression.
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The second group of CDK inhibitors, the Cip/Kip family, includes
p21/WAF1/CIP1 (p21), p27/kip1 (p27) and p57/kip2
(p57).14-22
These proteins inhibit kinase activities of
pre-activated G1 cyclin E-CDK2, cyclin D-CDK4/6, and other
cyclins. The Cip/Kip proteins are designated as universal CDKIs because
they interact with various CDK complexes, with cyclins A, E, D1, D2,
and D3, and CDKs.15
Overexpression of the kip proteins
leads to cell cycle arrest. Members of the kip proteins share a great
deal of homology. p27 protein has a 42% amino acid homology with p21
and a 47% homology with p57 at the amino-terminal domain, the region
that mediates inhibition of CDK. Kip proteins all have a nuclear
localization signal at their carboxyl-terminal domain. Unlike the INK4
group, which inhibits CDK4/6 only, the Cip/Kip inhibitors can also
target CDK2 in complexes
The p27 gene is located on chromosome 12p13 at the junction of
12p1212p13.1.21
This gene was cloned by several groups in
1994.14,16,23
Structural analysis of the p27 protein was
recently reported.24
Examination of the crystal structure
of the 69-amino-acid amino-terminal inhibitory domain of p27 bound to
the phosphorylated cyclin A-CDK2 showed that p27 binding causes large
conformational changes in and around the catalytic cleft of
CDK224
and that p27 has separate binding sites on the
cyclin and CDK subunits. This explains how p27 and other Kip/Cip
inhibitors can bind isolated subunits.15,24
Binding of the
p27 cyclin-CDK complex is significantly tighter than binding to the
isolated CDK and cyclin subunits, which is consistent with cooperative
binding of the two subunits.
p27 was first identified in cells treated with transforming growth
factor (TGF)-ß or by stimulation of contact inhibition where p27 was
found as an inactive form bound to CDK2-cyclin E.18,25
The
protein was purified from a cyclin E-CDK2 affinity column and
characterized by its strong inhibitory activity toward cyclin E-CDK2.
p27 can directly inhibit the enzymatic activity of CDK-cyclin complexes
and arrest cells in G1.18
The association of
p27 with CDK-4 cyclin D or with CDK2-cyclin E complexes blocks
phosphorylation of CDK4 on Thr 172 and CDK2 on Thr 160 via a CDK
activation kinase.22,26
p27 can be induced by cyclic AMP
and other negative regulators of the cell cycle22
and can
be down-regulated by interleukin 2.26
The levels of p27 protein are increased in quiescent cells and rapidly
decrease after stimulation with mitogens. Constitutive expression of
p27 in cultured cells causes cell cycle arrest in the G1
phase.15,16
When murine BALB/c-3T3 fibroblasts are deprived
of serum mitogens, p27 accumulates in these cells.27
This
finding was correlated with inactivation of G1-cyclin-CDK
complexes and with cell cycle arrest in G1. Inhibition of
p27 expression with antisense oligonucleotides prevents cell cycle
arrest in response to mitogen depletion, indicating that p27 is an
essential component of the pathway that connects mitogenic signals to
the cell cycle.27
Although p27 inhibits cyclin E-CDK2, recent studies have also shown
that p27 can serve as a substrate for cyclin E-CDK2.27
Using a murine fibroblast model, it was shown that cyclin E-CDK2 can
directly phosphorylate p27 (Figure 2)
,
and the cyclin E-CDK2-dependent phosphorylation of p27 results in
elimination of p27 from the cell, allowing transition from
G1 to S phase.28

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Figure 2. Effect of p27 on cyclin E-CDK2 complex. p27 binds to cyclin E-CDK2
complexes and prevent its activation. Although some p27 is present in
proliferating cells, it is sequestered and unavailable to interact with
cyclin E-CDK2. p27 can be regulated by the same enzyme it targets for
inhibition by becoming a cyclin E-CDK2 substrate, leading to its
phosphorylation and proteolysis by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.
Phosphorylation of retinoblastoma
(Rb) protein leads to
G1 to S progression.
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Other investigators demonstrated Ras-mediated down-regulation of p27
that involves suppression of synthesis leading to an increase in the
degradation of the p27 protein.29
It is postulated that Ras
function is required in late G1 for down-regulation of p27
and passage of the cell through the restriction point.29
The role of TGF-ß in regulating p27 has been investigated in many
systems.18,30-32
Using a C3H 10T1/2 mouse fibroblast model
it was shown that cyclin E-CDK2 inhibits p27 in the growth-arrested
state and that TGF-ß down-regulates the steady-state level of the p27
protein.30
Mal et al31
showed that mink lung
epithelial cells arrested in G1 by TGF-ß could be rescued
from this arrest by disabling of p27 via adenovirus oncoprotein E1A.
Qian et al demonstrated that TGF-ß down-regulates p27 protein and
mRNA levels in cultured rat anterior pituitary cells.32
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Functions of p27
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There are many putative functions attributed to p27 (Table 2)
. Extensive investigations have been
performed to elucidate the role of p27 as a CDKI in normal and
neoplastic cells.14,16,18,27-30
Some studies suggest a
putative role as a tumor suppressor gene. Loss of p27 protein
expression may result in tumor development and/or progression; however,
this loss of expression does not appear to result from gene
mutations.33-36
More than 500 tumors have been examined
for p27 mutations, and less than 5 of these have shown specific
mutations.34
These have included a stop codon at position
76 of an adult T-cell leukemia and hemizygous deletion of the p27 gene
in a B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma33
in addition to 2
point mutations in an analysis of 36 primary breast
carcinomas.34
One of the mutations in the breast carcinomas
was a polymorphous mutation at codon 142 and the other a nonsense
mutation at codon 104.34
St. Croix et al35
reported that p27 has a role in
regulating drug resistance in solid tumors. Human and mouse tumor cells
grown as multicellular spheroids in three-dimensional culture show a
consistent up-regulation of p27 (up to 15-fold).35
When a
mammary tumor cell line (EMT-6) was treated with antisense p27
oligonucleotides, there was increased cell proliferation, with
restoration of the drug- or radiation-induced cell cycle perturbations
that were repressed in spheroid culture.35
Recent studies have implicated p27 as a promoter of
apoptosis.37,38
Using the MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma cell
line to overexpress p27, Katayose et al37
found that
apoptosis was increased when measured by several
techniques.37
Similar results were observed in other cell
lines. Interestingly, p27 did not induce apoptosis in the total cell
population. As cells in G1 did not undergo apoptosis, a
possible explanation for this observation was that the cells arrested
in G1 may be protected in some way from induction of
apoptosis.37
Many studies have shown that p27 has a role in regulating
differentiation in some tissues.39-42
In a study of mouse
embryo skeletal muscle, functional assays showed that ectopic p27
expression enhances the efficiency of MyoD-initiated muscle
differentiation. It was proposed that p27 acts as a trigger for CDKI
while myoblasts are exiting the cell cycle and initiating
differentiation. In a study using oligodendrocyte cell precursors from
rats, Durand et al40
showed that p27 accumulates
progressively in the precursor cells as they proliferate and that p27
is present at high levels in mature oligodendrocytes, implicating p27
accumulation in the differentiation of oligodendroglial cells.
In a study of the effects of CDKIs on the regulation of the
G1 phase cyclin-dependent kinases, it was noted that
parathyroid hormone increases p27 levels but not p21 levels in
osteoblasts. The data implicate parathyroid hormone in blocking entry
of cells into the S phase and inhibiting cell proliferation when p27
accumulates within these cells. The effect of parathyroid hormone is
mediated through the protein kinase A pathway.41
Robker and
Richards reported that follicle-stimulating hormone and estradiol
regulate granulosa cell proliferation during the development of
preovulatory follicles by increasing the levels of cyclin D2 relative
to p27, whereas luteinizing hormone terminates follicular growth by
down-regulating cyclin D2 while up-regulating p27 as well as
p21.42
Thus, the LH surge with high cyclic AMP levels
induces the granulosa cells to enter a nonproliferative or more
differentiated stage as they enter the luteal phase.
p27 has been implicated in the protection of some cells against
inflammatory injury.43
Using mice with an engineered
deletion of the p27 gene,44-46
a model of experimental
glomerulonephritis was used to analyze immune-mediated inflammation.
Renal function decreases in p27 null mice compared with controls with
wild-type p27, and this is associated with increased glomerular cell
proliferation, apoptosis, and matrix protein
accumulation.43
Both tubular epithelial cell proliferation
and apoptosis are increased in p27 null mice after ureteral
obstruction. The authors concluded that p27 may have a general role in
protecting cells and tissues from inflammatory injury. Interestingly,
this in vivo effect of p27 on apoptosis in p27 null mice is
the opposite effect observed in vitro where p27 enhanced
apoptosis.38
There are two lines of evidence indicating that p27 suppresses cell
proliferation in vivo. Malignant human brain tumor cell
transfection with the p27 gene leads to inhibition of proliferation and
cell cycle arrest in G1.47
Ectopic
overexpression of p27 is associated with a striking decrease in
aneuploid cells, loss of anchorage-independent growth in soft agar, and
failure to induce tumor development in a xenograft model. Mice lacking
the p27 gene show an increase in body weight, thymic hypertrophy, and
hyperplasia of pituitary intermediate lobe adrenocorticotrophic hormone
cells, adrenal glands, and gonadal organs.44-46
Analysis
of CDK2 in the thymocytes of these knockout mice show a 10-fold
increase in the activity of this enzyme. A surprising finding was that
the effects of TGF-ß, rapamycin, and contact inhibition on cell
proliferation remained unchanged in p27 null mice, indicating that the
presence of p27 is not an absolute requirement for this
pathway.44
Several recent studies have implicated p27 in inhibition of cell cycle
progression by homophilic cell-cell interaction and in tumor
metastasis.48,49
St. Croix et al examined the role of the
homophilic cell-cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin in contact-dependent
growth inhibition using a mouse mammary carcinoma cell line, EMT 16, in
a multicellular spheroid model in vitro. They observed that
E-cadherin expression after transfection with an E-cadherin expression
vector resulted in an increase in the level of p27 and showed that
E-cadherin was a major growth suppressor as well as an invasion
suppressor.48
Studies of p27 protein expression in primary
colorectal carcinomas and their metastatic foci showed a marked
reduction in p27 expression in the metachronous metastases compared
with the corresponding primary tumor, suggesting that
down-regulation of p27 in circulating tumor cells may confer the
ability to grow in an environment of altered extracellular matrix or
intercellular adhesion properties that may facilitate tumor
metastasis.49
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Regulation of p27 Expression
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p27 protein levels increase in cells treated with cyclic AMP,
lovastatin, rapamycin, and tamoxifen,22,23,50,51
and this
increase is probably related to the G1 block produced by
these agents. Cells undergoing differentiation also have increased
levels of p27 protein.52,53
Several studies have shown that
the human papilloma virus can regulate p27 activity.31
Some
studies have shown that p27 levels are regulated by alterations of
protein stability; thus, the half-life of p27 is much longer in
quiescent cells compared with proliferating cells.50
Ubiquitination is the principal mechanism regulating p27 protein
degradation.54-57
Ubiquitin is a small protein of 7000 MW
that is covalently linked to a target protein.58-63
The
ubiquitin-target protein complex is specified by the ubiquitinating
enzymes E1, E2, and E3. The ubiquitin-activating enzymes (E1s) are the
first enzymes involved in protein ubiquitination. These enzymes form a
thioester bond between the carboxy terminus of ubiquitin and an
internal cysteine residue. E2s are designated as ubiquitin-conjugating
enzymes, or Ubcs, and form a thioester bond between the internal
systemic residue and the carboxy terminus of a molecule of ubiquitin.
E2 transfers the ubiquitin to
-amino groups of lysine in the target
protein. The ubiquitin ligases (E3s) are not as well characterized.
They act as substrate recognition factors. The proteasome, which is a
multimeric protein complex, recognizes the covalent adduction between
ubiquitin and the target protein such as p27, which leads to
degradation of the target protein with recycling of ubiquitin.
Pagano et al54
showed that the peptide-aldehyde
N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal-H (LLnL), an
inhibitor of the chymotryptic site on the protease, leads to the
accumulation of p27 protein and its ubiquinated forms of approximating
Mr 70,000 and Mr 100,000,
indicating that p27 was polyubiquitinated in vivo. Our
laboratory has also observed ubiquitin-proteasome regulation of p27
protein in a human pituitary cell line (Figure 3)
.

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Figure 3. Analysis of the effect of inhibition of the chymotryptic site of the
ubiquitin-proteasome pathway on cellular p27. The HP75 pituitary cell
line (produced in our
laboratory) was treated with the
peptide-aldehyde
N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal-H
(LLnL), an inhibitor of
the chymotryptic site on the proteasome, or with the cysteine protease
inhibitor L-trans-expoxysuccinic acid
(E64) as a control for 16
hours in culture. The cells were homogenized and analyzed for p27 by
Western blotting using a monoclonal antibody
(Transduction Laboratories, Lexington,
KY) and enhanced chemiluminescence
(Amersham, Arlington Heights,
IL). The samples include the following:
lane 1, control cells with culture media only; lane 2,
cells treated with dimethylsulfoxide (100-µl
volume equivalent to the LLNL and E64 vehicle volume); Lane 3,
50 µmol/L LLnL; lane 4, 100 µmol/L LLnL; lane 5, 50
µmol/L E64; lane 6, 100 µmol/L E64; lane 7, HeLa
cells used as a p27-positive control. LLnL, but not E64, increased p27
protein in the HP75 cells. ß-Actin was used to normalize for protein
loading. The graph on the right was generated by densitometric analysis
of the film. These results indicate that the ubiquitin-proteasome
pathway is one of the mechanisms regulating the expression of p27
protein in pituitary tumor cells.
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When purified p27 was incubated with Ubc2 or Ubc3, a mono-ubiquitinated
form of p27 was generated, suggesting that polyubiquinated p27 requires
additional factors such as E3. Extracts from proliferating or S phase
cells contain more p27 ubiquinating and degradation activities than
extracts from quiescent cells.61,63
Half-life studies have
shown that p27 in proliferating cells is sixfold less stable than in
quiescent cells,54
which explains why p27 is expressed at
much higher levels in quiescent cells than in proliferating cells and
highlights the translational control of p27 expression by
ubiquitin-mediated degradation.
Phosphorylation appears to be an important mechanism for p27
degradation.55,56,64
p27 phosphorylation is cell cycle
dependent and peaks during the late G1 phase. The amount of
p27 protein is inversely correlated with its phosphorylation. Using
human fibroblasts, Monsaki et al58
reported that cyclin
E/CDK2 phosphorylated p27 on threonine 187 in vitro, and
phosphorylation of p27 affected the stability of the p27 protein. It
has ben shown that p27 must be phosphorylated by CDK2 on a conserved
carboxyl-terminal CDK target site to be degraded by the
proteasome.56
The importance of phosphorylation and the ubiquitin ligase complex in
the degradation of cell cycle proteins such as p27 is derived in part
from experiments in yeast.65
A specific ubiquitin ligase
complex, SCFcdc4P, when mixed with the ubiquitin-activating
enzymes E1, the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2, Cdc34p, and ubiquitin
led to the reconstitution of ubiquination of the phosphorylated CdK
inhibitor Sic1p, providing a molecular basis for the G1/S transition,
which may be a general mechanism for ubiquitination after
phosphorylation in eukaryotes.65
Although protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is the
principal method of proteolysis of p27, recent studies have shown that
methylation may be another mechanism regulating p27 expression. Using
various pituitary tumor cell lines, Qian et al66
showed
that GH3 and GHRH-CL1 cell lines, both of which produce
prolactin and growth hormone, express very little p27 protein or
mRNA.33
Analysis of exon I and part of exon II of the p27
gene using bisulfite genomic sequencing showed that both
GH3 and GHRHCL1 cell lines are hypermethylated whereas the
control rat pituitary p27 gene is hypomethylated.66
By
changing the methylation status of the p27 gene with
5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine they were able to show that methylation and
methyltransferase activity regulated expression of p27 in some
pituitary cell lines. The importance of methylation of the p27 gene in
regulating its function is not known.
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p27 as a Diagnostic and Prognostic Marker
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During the past 2 years a large number of studies have
examined the diagnostic and prognostic significance of p27 expression
in various tumors. Almost all studies report decreased p27 expression
in more aggressive tumors67-75
76-90
(Figure 4)
. p27 expression is reported to be an
independent prognostic factor or potentially useful in the diagnosis of
a broad spectrum of tumors. According to Steeg and
Abrams,67
for a new prognostic marker to enter into routine
clinical use at least three criteria must be met. 1) The marker
provides information independent of and better than conventional
pathological criteria. 2) The marker provides information that can
alter treatment decisions. 3) Studies with the marker are reproducible.

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Figure 4. Immunohistochemical staining for p27 expression in normal and
neoplastic tissues. A: Lymph node tissue with p27 staining on
left showing strong immunoreactivity in quiescent cells and less
staining in proliferating cells. The germinal center
(GC) with proliferating
cells had few cells positive for p27. Staining with a Ki67 antibody
MIB-1, which recognizes proliferating cells, showed the opposite
pattern of staining compared with p27 with strong staining of most
cells in the GC. Magnification, x200. B: There is selective
localization of p27 in normal anterior pituitary cells. Immunostaining
of normal anterior pituitary for p27 (nuclear
purple staining) and for thyroid stimulating
hormone (TSH; brown cytoplasmic
staining) shows localization of p27 in some TSH
cells (arrows). Magnification,
x300. C: Normal and neoplastic breast tissue with strong
staining for p27 in normal mammary ducts whereas the invasive carcinoma
cells are mostly negative. Magnification, x300. D: Normal and
neoplastic prostate tissue showing strong staining for p27 in normal
prostatic ducts while the invasive carcinoma cells are weakly positive
or negative. Magnification, x300. E: Parathyroid tissue
showing strong nuclear staining for p27 in the normal cells on the left
whereas the adenoma on the right stains weakly, indicating low
expression of p27. Magnification, x250. F: The normal thyroid
on the left shows strong nuclear staining for p27 in the follicular
cells. The papillary carcinoma on the right shows low expression of p27
protein. Magnification, x250.
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Many reports have validated the utility of p27 as a prognostic and/or
diagnostic marker (Table 3)
.
Studies of breast carcinoma68-70
showed that p27 protein
expression is lower in more aggressive tumors. The studies used a
single immunohistochemical assay for the protein, indicating the
reliability of this technique. Catzavelos et al68
showed
that p27 is a predictor of reduced disease-free survival by
Kaplan-Meier analysis. Porter et al69
combined analyses of
p27 and cyclin E and showed that both of these cell cycle regulators
are prognostic markers of tumor behavior. Tan et al70
analyzed p27 expression in breast cancers less than 1 cm in size in 202
patients and found that nodal status and low p27 expression are
independent prognostic parameters by both univariate and multivariate
analyses. They concluded that p27 identified node-negative patients
with small invasive breast carcinomas that were at high risk for tumor
progression and therefore might benefit from adjuvant therapy.
Three studies have examined p27 expression in colorectal
cancers.71-73
Loda et al72
showed that the
absence of p27 protein expression was a powerful negative prognostic
marker in colorectal carcinomas, particularly in stage II tumors, and
suggested that this marker may help in the selection of patients who
would benefit from adjuvant therapy. These investigators also showed
that carcinomas with low or absent p27 protein showed enhanced
proteolytic activity for p27, suggesting that the low p27 expression
resulted from increased protease-mediated degradation rather than from
altered gene expression. In another study of p27 in multistage
colorectal carcinogenesis, Ciaparrone et al73
found a
significant correlation between p27 expression and tumor grade with
well and moderately differentiated carcinomas expressing higher p27,
while the poorly differentiated carcinomas had significantly lower
expression.
Other areas of the gastrointestinal tract have also been studied for
p27 expression and tumor behavior. In esophageal adenocarcinomas, low
p27 protein correlated with higher histological grade, depth of
invasion, presence of lymph node metastasis, and patient
survival.74
Interestingly, in the study of Singh et al,
both cytoplasmic as well as nuclear localization of p27 were associated
with decreased patient survival.74
p27 has also been found
to be an independent prognostic factor for patients with gastric
carcinomas.75
In a study of p27 expression in non-small-cell lung carcinoma, Esposito
et al76
showed that p27 was a prognostic factor correlating
with patient survival. Kawana et al77
also examined a group
of non-small-cell carcinomas and showed that the p27 labeling index
decreased in carcinomas compared with non-neoplastic lung tissues and
was inversely related to the proliferation marker Ki-67. Yatabe et
al78
also found that p27 was a significant prognostic
factor in non-small-cell lung carcinoma; however, in the more
aggressive small cell carcinoma, they identified an increased p27
expression when compared with the corresponding normal lung epithelium.
This variable expression of p27 in endocrine tumors will be discussed
below.
Several studies have analyzed p27 expression in prostate
adenocarcinoma.79-82
Tsihlias et al79
and Yang
et al80
showed that low p27 expression was an independent
predictor of treatment failure and an independent prognostic factor for
disease recurrence. Yang et al81
suggested that patients
with low or absent p27 protein expression may be candidates for novel
adjuvant therapies. Cheville et al81
observed that p27
expression correlated with a higher mean Gleason score, lymph node
metastasis, and aneuploid cancers, but it did not correlate with
subclinical biochemical failure. Cordon-Cardo et al82
observed that primary prostate carcinomas with lower levels of p27
protein were more biologically aggressive. In addition, they observed
that p27 protein and mRNA were almost undetectable in both epithelial
and stromal cells of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), supporting the
concept that BPH is not a precursor to prostate carcinoma.
In the first reported study of p27 expression in malignant melanoma,
Florenes et al83
observed that this CDKI was correlated
with tumor thickness in nodular melanoma but not in superficial
spreading melanomas. Although p27 did not appear to influence overall
survival for either subgroup, a complete loss of p27 expression had
potential importance as a prognostic indicator of early relapse in
patients with nodular melanomas.
Analysis of p27 protein expression in squamous cell lesions of the oral
cavity showed that p27 was significantly reduced in oral dysplasias and
carcinomas compared with that in normal squamous
epithelium.84
There is also a significant reduction in p27
protein between low- and high-grade dysplasias, suggesting that changes
in p27 expression may be an early change in oral squamous cell
carcinogenesis.
Analysis of p27 protein expression in endocrine tumor was first
reported by Lloyd et al.85
They observed decreased
expression of p27 in endocrine adenomas and carcinomas compared with
normal tissues. However, the changes are not as striking as identified
in some non-endocrine tissues, such as breast, prostate, and colonic
carcinomas. For example, in a study of thyroid carcinomas, Erickson et
al86
found similar levels of p27 in high- and low-grade
cancers, ie, anaplastic carcinomas and papillary carcinomas. Similar
findings were observed in a comparison of different types of papillary
carcinomas by others.87
In a large series of parathyroid
tumors, there was significantly decreased p27 expression in carcinomas
compared with adenomas.88
Jin et al89
reported
that in pituitary tumors, the p27 protein levels decreased during
progression from adenomas to carcinomas, but the differences were
moderate compared with other non-endocrine tumors. Jin et
al89
showed that regulation in the pituitary was
post-translational as the mRNA levels were similar in normal and
tumorous pituitaries. Similar findings were reported in parathyroid
tumors by Erickson et al.88
In ACTH-secreting pituitary
tumors, Dahia et al90
reported that corticotroph adenomas
express p27 protein, although one carcinoma in their series showed loss
of p27 protein expression. Analysis of three other pituitary carcinomas
by the same investigators showed two tumors with loss of expression,
although one case showed moderate expression.
p27 protein expression has been used as a diagnostic marker in some
endocrine tumors. Erickson et al found significant differences in the
p27 labeling indices between follicular adenomas and follicular
carcinomas.86
They suggested that immunostaining for p27
might be useful in distinguishing between these two tumors. Similarly,
they reported that p27 immunostaining could be used to distinguish
between parathyroid adenomas and carcinomas.88
The relationship of decreased levels of p27 protein and tumor
progression is variable in different endocrine tumors. Our studies of
adrenal cortical and medullary tumors showed only slight differences
between normal benign and malignant tumors with respect to p27 protein
expression.85
Yatabe et al78
also reported a
higher level of p27 in small-cell neuroendocrine lung carcinomas
compared with non-small-cell tumors. As small-cell lung carcinomas have
a high proliferation rate, one would predict low levels of p27 protein,
as in many tissues there is an inverse relationship between tumor
proliferation and p27 expression. However, small-cell carcinoma is
known to have genetic defects, such as in the Rb and p53 tumor
suppressor genes and over expression of c-myc,91
that might
allow this neoplasm to proliferate despite high p27 levels. Recent
reports suggest that c-myc could overcome p27-induced growth arrest by
allowing cyclin E-CDK2 to function in the presence of elevated
levels of p27.92
Analysis of p27 expression in lymphomas has shown that p27 protein is
present in quiescent lymphocytes within lymphoid tissues and peripheral
blood.93
Lymphomas with a low proliferative rate are mostly
positive, whereas tumors with a higher growth fraction have low p27
protein levels. However, p27 expression in some high-grade, mitotically
active tumors were increased, such as Burkitt's lymphoma and large
B-cell. These tumors also have mutations in the p53 pathway that might
allow the cells to escape the inhibitory effects of p27.
Quintanilla-Martinez et al94
found that in lymphomas p27
expression was inversely related to cell proliferation. Interestingly,
all mantle cell lymphomas lacked p27 protein. They postulated that the
uncoupling of p27 protein expression from proliferation rate may be
related to the high levels of cyclin D1 found in these mantle cell
lymphomas.
 |
Role of CDKIs and Cyclins in Endocrine Cell Hyperplasia and
Neoplasia
|
|---|
With a few exceptions, endocrine tumors are usually slow growing.
Compared with other types of carcinomas, endocrine tumors, such as
papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas, carcinoid tumors, islet
cell carcinomas and parathyroid carcinomas, continue to grow slowly
even after metastasizing.95
These observations suggest that
there is significant inhibitory control of cell proliferation in most
endocrine tumors and possibly a greater role of CDKIs in endocrine cell
proliferation. In addition to genetic alterations in suppressor
genes and oncogenes,96-104
several lines of evidence point
to an increasing importance of cell cycle protein dysregulation during
the development of endocrine tumors104-111
(Figure 5)
.

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|
Figure 5. Schematic model showing the influence of p27, other CDKIs and cyclins
on the development of endocrine cell hyperplasia and neoplasia.
Dysregulation of various CDKIs, including p27, p16, p21, and p57 and of
the D-type cyclins have been observed in various proliferating
endocrine tissues (see
text). Dysregulation of CDKIs and cyclins
leading to increased cell proliferation in adult endocrine tissues
increases the likelihood of developing genetic alterations resulting in
tumor development.
|
|
Studies of parathyroid tumors showed that the PRAD1 oncogene
represented a rearrangement of cyclin D1 with a pericentric inversion
on chromosome 11.99,100
Point mutations in PRAD1 are not
needed for tumorigenesis.107
Dysregulation of CDKI in
parathyroid adenomas and carcinomas has been reported, especially with
p27.88
Pituitary adenomas and carcinomas were found to have
dysregulation of various CDKIs, including p16 and p27. Woloshak et
al105,106
observed decreased expression of p16 in pituitary
adenomas compared with normal pituitaries, and they showed that this
decreased expression is due to increased methylation of the p16 gene.
Similarly, Jin et al89
and Dahia et al90
showed
dysregulation of p27 during progression from normal pituitary to
adenomas and carcinomas. Dahia et al90
studied corticotroph
adenomas and carcinomas and reported loss of p27 expression in most
pituitary carcinomas. Our laboratory has shown that two mechanisms of
regulation of p27 occur in endocrine cells and tumors, the
ubiquitin-proteasome pathway54,57
and p27 gene
methylation65
with the former being the more common
mechanism. Our studies have also shown cyclin D expression in
pituitaries with a shift from cyclin D2 in normal pituitary to cyclin
D3 in immortalized pituitary tumors such as
GH3.108
In the adrenal cortex another CDKI, p57kip2 (p57), is
implicated in adrenal cortical tumorigenesis. Mice lacking p57 develop
adrenal cortical hyperplasia and cytomegaly.103,104
The
levels of p57 mRNA are high in normal adrenal cortex and very low in
some adrenal cortical adenomas and carcinomas, indicating decreased
expression of this CDKI with tumorigenesis. Although the mechanism of
regulation of p57 has not been elucidated in adrenal cortical tumors,
the changes in mRNA indicate that post-translational regulation may not
be as important as methylation or other epigenetic
changes.109
Numerous abnormalities in oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes have
been identified in thyroid tumors and are implicated in tumor
progression.101,110
However, dysregulation of CDKIs and
cyclins also play important roles in thyroid tumor progression, as p27
protein levels are much higher in thyroid adenomas and normal thyroids
compared with carcinomas. The CDKI p21, which is a downstream mediator
of p53, has been implicated in thyroid tumorigenesis. Zedenius et al
showed that thyroid tumors with p53 mutations have markedly reduced p21
expression.111,112
Cyclin D1 overexpression has also been
observed in Hurthle cell carcinomas compared to adenomas
(L. A. Erickson, L. Jin, J. R. Goellner, L. R.
Zukerberg, R. V. Lloyd, unpublished observations).
These data highlight the increasing importance of CDKIs and cyclins
in regulating endocrine tumor development and progression and should
provide models to study the mechanisms involved in differentiation and
tumor development in endocrine tissues.
 |
Future Challenges
|
|---|
Although a great deal of knowledge about the role of p27 in cell
cycle progression and tumor development has accumulated, there are
still many unanswered questions. Preliminary evidence suggests that
c-myc may regulate p27 levels.92
Other studies indicate
that cyclin E,28
Stat proteins (signal transducer and
activator of transcription 6) in lymphoid cells,113
and
cyclin D114
can also regulate p27 levels in some cells. A
recent study using cultured astrocytes indicated that multiple CDKIs
are necessary to maintain cell cycle progression in this
system.115
Some tumors, such as mantle cell lymphomas,
overexpress cyclin D1 but have very little p27.94
Other
studies have shown an interaction of p27 and p21 in some tumors with
the cleavage of both p27 and p21 resulting in activation of CDK2,
leading to increased apoptosis in some cells.38
More
experimental data about the interaction of p27 with other cell cycle
regulatory proteins are needed.
The rarity of mutations and other genetic alterations in the p27 gene
during tumor development is not consistent with its role as a tumor
suppressor gene. Investigations into whether there are mutations or
other genetic alterations in the ubiquitin-proteasome system leading to
increased degradation of p27 and other cell cycle proteins during tumor
progression are needed, and the experimental tools are available to
address these questions. The recent observations of increased p27 in
several human breast cancer cell lines compared with cell lines from
normal mammary epithelial cells were surprising and difficult to
explain.116
Additional experiments done by transfecting
normal and neoplastic mammary lines with a vector containing p27 showed
that the increased expression of p27 was associated with decreased
cyclin D1 in the neoplastic MCF7 cell line, but not in the normal cell
line, and slightly increased levels of cyclin E protein in both cell
lines117
indicated that the role of multiple interacting
CDKIs and cyclins in regulating G1 to S progression and
their synchronous dysregulation during tumor development requires
additional studies. With the complex interactions of CDKIs, CDKs, and
cyclins, there is an increased likelihood of alterations of these genes
and/or their protein products. Finally, analysis of the roles of
specific growth factors, hormones, and other influences on p27, other
CDKI, CDKs, and cyclins should provide new insights into the mechanisms
underlying the molecular changes leading to cellular differentiation or
tumorigenesis.118
 |
Note Added in Proof
|
|---|
Since submission of this review, two significant studies have been
published that provide new insights into the role of p27 in
tumorigenesis. Franklin et al119
showed that p27 and p18
mediate two separate pathways to collaboratively suppress pituitary
tumorigenesis, possibly by controlling the function of Rb. Fero et
al120
showed that p27 is haplo-insufficient for tumor
suppression, belonging to a new class of tumor suppressor genes.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Address reprint requests to Dr. R. V. Lloyd, Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street, SW, Rochester, MN 55905. E-mail: lloyd.ricardo{at}mayo.edu
Supported in part by NIH grants CA42951 and CA37238.
Accepted for publication October 28, 1998.
 |
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