Oncotarget

Loss of Trp53 Gene Promotes Tumor Growth and Immune Suppression in Ovarian Cancer

Sep 24, 2025
Discover how the loss of the Trp53 gene significantly impacts ovarian cancer progression. Researchers reveal that deleting this key tumor suppressor results in more aggressive tumors and weakened immune responses. The study highlights why some high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas resist immunotherapy, illustrating that fewer active T cells and reduced pro-inflammatory signaling allow tumors to evade immune detection. The findings open new avenues for enhancing treatment strategies in this deadly cancer type.
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INSIGHT

TRP53 Loss Models Human HGSC

  • Deleting TRP53 in ovarian epithelial cells creates a mouse model that mirrors early human HGSC genotype and origin site.
  • This model links a key genetic change to disease development and immune interactions.
INSIGHT

TRP53 Loss Drives Aggressive, Immune-Cold Tumors

  • Tumors from TRP53-deleted cells grew faster and were more invasive in mice, reflecting human disease progression.
  • These tumors showed fewer active T cells and weaker pro-inflammatory gene activity.
INSIGHT

Hypoactive T Cells Accompany TRP53 Loss

  • The existing T cells in TRP53-deficient tumors appeared hypoactive and less capable of responding to cancer.
  • Loss of TRP53 initiates changes that weaken immune surveillance and accelerate progression.
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