CDKN2A

What is the CDKN2A Gene?

The CDKN2A gene (Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor 2A) encodes two key tumor suppressor proteins through alternative reading frames:

  1. p16INK4a – Inhibits CDK4/6, blocking cell cycle progression from G1 to S phase.
  2. p14ARF (p19ARF in mice) – Stabilizes p53 by inhibiting MDM2, promoting apoptosis or cell cycle arrest.

Primary Function: Acts as a “brake” on uncontrolled cell division.


Prevalence of CDKN2A Mutations in Cancer

CDKN2A is inactivated in ~50% of all human cancers, either by mutations, deletions, or epigenetic silencing. Key cancer associations:

Cancer TypeInactivation FrequencyNotes
Melanoma (Familial)~40% of hereditary casesGermline mutations
Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma~90%Somatic deletions common
Glioblastoma~50-60%Homozygous deletions
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)~30%Often co-deleted with CDKN2B
Squamous Cell Carcinomas~50%HPV+ tumors often silence p16

How CDKN2A Loss Could Cause Cancer

Mechanisms of Tumorigenesis

  1. p16INK4a Loss:
    • Fails to inhibit CDK4/6-cyclin D, leading to hyperphosphorylation of Rb.
    • Results in unchecked E2F-mediated transcription and cell cycle progression.
  2. p14ARF Loss:
    • Unable to block MDM2, leading to p53 degradation.
    • Loss of p53-dependent apoptosis/DNA repair.
  3. Synergistic Effects:
    • Combined loss of p16 and p14 promotes cell immortalization.
    • Common in aggressive cancers (e.g., glioblastoma, pancreatic cancer).

Clinical Implications & Treatments

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