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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thyroid
follicular adenomas (FA) are encapsulated tumors lacking vascular, capsular or lymphatic invasion and the typical nuclear features of papillary carcinoma (PC). However, some FA demonstrate nuclear atypia reminiscent of either follicular carcinomas (FC) or follicular variant of papillary carcinomas (FVPC), suggesting they may represent precursors of malignant transformation. We hypothesized that an objective evaluation of nuclear chromatin patterns could be used to define atypical follicular tumors (AFT) that are likely to be premalignant. To test this hypothesis, we used a computer-aided image analysis system to define the chromatin pattern of nuclei from thyroid tumors. To validate the system, we analyzed 3000 nuclei from 10 FA, 10 FC, and 10 FVPC samples and accurately distinguished between these classes of tumors. Then, we analyzed nine AFT and, in parallel, we analyzed the tumors for activating mutations of N2-RAS and over-expression of
RET
. The predominant chromatin pattern of AFT was of FA type in two cases, FC type in two cases, and PC type in three cases. One case contained similar numbers of FC and PC nuclei and one was comprised of a mixture of the three nuclear types. Neither RAS mutation nor
RET
overexpression were detected in FA. N2-RAS mutations were found in 33% of AFT, 20% of FC and 20% of FVPC without correlation with chromatin pattern. Over-expression of
RET
was detected in 45% of AFT, 20% of FC and 50% of FVPC and was correlated with PC nuclei. These results show that AFT are a heterogeneous group of tumors, containing genuine benign tumors and tumors that share morphological and molecular features with follicular and papillary carcinomas that might be precursors of both types of thyroid carcinomas.
...
PMID:Thyroid follicular adenomas may display features of follicular carcinoma and follicular variant of papillary carcinoma. 1558 46
Identification of the germline mutation in the RET proto-oncogene is important for the diagnosis of hereditary medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Hereditary forms account for approximately 25%-30% of all cases of MTC. The objective of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of the
RET
mutation and the genotype-phenotype relation in Korean patients with MTC. Genomic DNAs were obtained from 33 patients with MTC (M:F = 10:23, 39.8 +/- 12.0 years) who underwent total thyroidectomy between 1997 and 2003 at the Samsung Medical Center. Exons 10, 11, 13, 14, 15 and 16 of the RET proto-oncogene were amplified with specific primers using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Sequence analysis was performed on the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) product using an automatic sequence analyzer. Nine of the 33 patients (M:F = 3:6, 33.3 +/- 10.0 years) were identified as having
RET
mutations. Six patients had multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) 2A and one had familial medullary thyroid carcinoma (FMTC). The remaining two patients were thought to have sporadic MTC. Five of the patients with MEN 2A had
RET
mutations in codon 634 of exon 11 (3 patients, C634Y; 2 patients, C634R) and the other patient with MEN 2A had a
RET
mutation in codon 618 of exon 10 (C618R). The patient with FMTC had a mutation in codon 634 (C634W). The two patients with sporadic MTC had
RET
mutations in codon 634 (1 patient, C634Y; 1 patient, C634S). We were not able to identify any genotype-phenotype relations because of the limited number of patients. Twenty-seven percent (9/33) of the patients with MTC in this study had
RET
mutations. Taking other studies into account, 77% (10/13) of Korean families with MEN 2A, including 7 other families in three reports from Korea, had
RET
mutations in codon 634 (5 families, C634Y; 4 families, C634R; 1 family, C634W), and 23% (3/13) had
RET
mutations in codon 618 (2 families, C618R; 1 family, C618S). RET proto-oncogene mutations were restricted to codon 634 and 618 in Korean families with MEN 2A.
Thyroid
2004 Oct
PMID:RET proto-oncogene mutations are restricted to codon 634 and 618 in Korean families with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A. 1558 76
Recent studies have focused on the occurrence of concomitant medullary-papillary thyroid carcinomas (MTC-PTC). The aims of this report were to compare the frequency of occult PTC in a population with MTC versus a control population that had undergone thyroidectomies and to check whether differences could be related to particular phenotype or genotype. To achieve these goals, we determined the frequency of occult PTC among patients operated for MTC (n = 82) or undergoing total thyroidectomy mainly for goiter and/or nodules (n = 7313) between 1994-2001. We then examined the clinical, histologic, and genetic characteristics (using a bio-chemical family inquiry and screening for
RET
germline mutations) of patients with associated PTC-MTC. Results show a significantly higher frequency of occult PTC in MTC (14.7%) than in total thyroidectomy (6.8%; p < 0.01). Seventeen cases of MTC or bilateral C-cell hyperplasia (CCH) and separate occult PTC were identified from 16 different families. Although common
RET
mutations providing evidence of familial forms of MTC were identified in only 3 of 16 families, clinical and histologic features usually seen in inherited forms of MTC such as young age of occurrence, bilateral CCH or associated case in family were found in 11 of the remaining 14 patients. In conclusion, results suggest that the association of MTC-PTC is not only a coincidence. Surprisingly, 11 of 17 MTC-PTC patients exhibited clinical, histologic, and/or family features usually encountered in familial forms despite the fact that no
RET
defect were present. This suggests the possible involvement of another gene or uncommon abnormality of
RET
gene.
Thyroid
2004 Oct
PMID:Thyroid carcinomas involving follicular and parafollicular C cells: seventeen cases with characterization of RET oncogenic activation. 1558 81
Thyroid
hormone deficiency during the critical period of neural differentiation produces permanent and severe alterations in the morphology and function of the nervous system leading to cretinism. Perinatal hypothyroidism results in permanent alterations of hippocampal synaptic functions in adult rats consequently causing learning and memory impairment. Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are a family of protein kinases that regulate essential cellular activities ranging from gene expression, mitosis, programmed cell death to plasticity and memory formation, but their involvement in perinatal hypothyroidism is not determined. The present work was designed to investigate MAPKs phosphorylation in hippocampus of congenital neonatal hypothyroid rats. Congenital hypothyroidism promotes an increase in extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 (
ERK
1/2) phosphorylation (+50%) and a decrease in p38(MAPK) phosphorylation (-50%) without changing in Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK) phosphorylation. Therefore, the congenital hypothyroidism model disturbs
ERK
1/2 and p38(MAPK) phosphorylation pathways causing an important molecular alteration in the hippocampus. This event might be related, at least partially, to the deficits in hippocampal development and cognitive functions due neonatal congenital hypothyroidism.
...
PMID:Congenital hypothyroidism alters the phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and p38MAPK in the hippocampus of neonatal rats. 1561 63
Tissue samples from 60 post-Chernobyl childhood thyroid tumors have been investigated. We used comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to detect chromosomal gains and losses within the tumor DNA. This is the first CGH study on childhood thyroid tumors. The post-Chernobyl tumors showed chromosomal imbalances in 30% of tumors. The most frequent DNA copy number changes in post-Chernobyl tumors involved chromosomes 2, 7q11.2-21, 13q21-22, 21 (DNA gains), and chromosomes 16p/q, 20q, 22q (DNA losses). Some of these specific alterations detected in post-Chernobyl thyroid tumors (deletions on chromosomes 16p/q and 22q) have previously been reported in thyroid tumors as associated with an aggressive biologic behavior and may therefore also account for the more aggressive phenotype of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) found in post- Chernobyl tumors. Eighteen percent of post-Chernobyl PTC that exhibit
RET
rearrangements also showed chromosomal imbalances indicating that either additional genetic events are involved in this subset of tumors, or that intratumoral genetic heterogeneity exists in these tumors, suggesting a oligoclonal pattern to tumor development.
Thyroid
2004 Dec
PMID:Chromosomal imbalances in post-chernobyl thyroid tumors. 1565 Mar 59
Papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (mPTC), is a very frequent incidental finding with a frequency varying from a few percent to 35% at postmortem histopathologic examinations. However, the presence of mPTC in patients undergoing thyroidectomy for multinodular goiter (MNG) and for Graves' disease (GD) has been found to be lower. Patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) and papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) association have been published as anecdotal case reports, as well as kindred with familial MTC or multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) 2A with some members simultaneously affected by MTC and PTC. We studied the prevalence and the biological behavior of MTC associated with PTC, with particular attention to those cases in which a mPTC was incidentally found. Twenty-seven of 196 (13.8%) MTC cases showed an association with PTC and in particular 21 of 190 (11.05%) with an incidental mPTC. This percentage is higher than that reported in the literature on the association of mPTC with GD (2.8%-4.5%) and MNG (3%). Also the percentage of the more general association of MTC/PTC, not restricted to mPTC, found in our series (13.8%) is higher than that reported in studies that analyzed the prevalence of PTC (any size) in patients treated for MNG (7.5%). A similarly high percentage of MTC/PTC had not been reported before and in particular there are no reports on large series of MTC/PTC. We also analyzed the epidemiologic, clinical, and pathologic features of MTC associated and not associated with PTC without finding any difference. In particular the outcome of the MTC did not appear to be influenced by the presence of the PTC and the specific radioiodine treatments. Moreover, although we cannot completely exclude a shared pathogenic event as the cause of both MTC and PTC, the molecular analysis of
RET
gene alterations did not show any common mutation.
Thyroid
2004 Nov
PMID:Medullary and papillary tumors are frequently associated in the same thyroid gland without evidence of reciprocal influence in their biologic behavior. 1567 73
Thyroid
hormones are critical for the development and maturation of the central nervous system. Insufficiency of thyroid hormones during development impairs performance on tasks of learning and memory that rely upon the hippocampus and impairs synaptic function in young hypothyroid animals. The present study was designed to determine if perturbations in synaptic function persist in adult euthyroid animals exposed developmentally to insufficient levels of hormone. Pre- and postnatal thyroid hormone insufficiency was induced by administration of 3 or 10 ppm propylthiouracil (PTU) to pregnant and lactating dams via the drinking water from gestation day (GD) 6 until postnatal day (PN) 30. This regimen produced a graded level of hormonal insufficiency in the dam and the offspring. Population spike and population excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP) were recorded at the pyramidal cell layer and the stratum radiatum, respectively, in area CA1 of hippocampal slices from adult male offspring. PTU exposure increased baseline synaptic transmission, reduced paired-pulse facilitation, and increased the magnitude of the population spike long-term potentiation (LTP). Phosphorylation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK1 and ERK2) was increased as a function of LTP stimulation in slices from PTU-exposed adult animals. On the other hand, no differences in the basal levels of synaptic proteins implicated in synaptic plasticity (total
ERK
, synapsin, growth-associated protein-43, and neurogranin) were detected. These results reinforce previous findings of persistent changes in synaptic function and, importantly extend these observations to moderate levels of thyroid hormone insufficiency that do not induce significant toxicity to the dams or the offspring. Such alterations in hippocampal synaptic function may contribute to persistent behavioral deficits associated with developmental hypothyroidism.
...
PMID:Impairment in short-term but enhanced long-term synaptic potentiation and ERK activation in adult hippocampal area CA1 following developmental thyroid hormone insufficiency. 1567 45
In both medullary carcinoma and papillary carcinoma of the thyroid, altered expression of the
RET
gene is implicated in tumorigenesis. Recent studies suggest that loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the G691S SNP may be associated with tumors from patients with a history of radiation exposure. We investigated LOH for three
RET
SNPs (G691S, S904S, and L769L) in tumor and normal tissue from 46 patients from Ukraine and Belarus who were exposed to radioactive fallout following the Chernobyl nuclear accident and were operated for papillary thyroid carcinoma between 1995 and 2000. Normal tissue from 28 patients was heterozygous for at least one SNP; DNA from the corresponding tumor samples was also heterozygous, indicating that no LOH had taken place. To assess SNP frequencies in a radiation-associated thyroid cancer cohort, we investigated a further 68 unpaired post-Chernobyl samples. For G691S, there was considerable deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium; more detailed analysis showed that this was linked to age at onset of disease. Among younger patients, the distribution of genotypes conformed to Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium; among older patients, we observed marked deviation (p = 0.0072), with significant over-representation of the rare S allele relative to the younger groups (Fisher's exact, p = 0.0233). This suggests that SNPs in the
RET
oncogene may play a role in sporadic papillary thyroid carcinoma.
Thyroid
2005 Feb
PMID:Investigation of loss of heterozygosity and SNP frequencies in the RET gene in papillary thyroid carcinoma. 1575 66
Thyroid
tumors are rare in childhood and adolescence. A retrospective analysis was done of fifteen patients (8 female) with thyroid carcinoma attended in the Pediatric Endocrinology Unit of the HC-UFPR, from February 1988 to March 2003. The most frequent initial complaint was an anterior cervical nodule. Ten patients were papillary carcinoma (PTC) bearers, four had medullary carcinoma (MTC; three of them with MEN-2B) and one had follicular carcinoma. Two patients with MEN-2B have de novo proto-oncogene
RET
mutation (Met918Thr). Fine needle aspiration (FNA) was performed in ten patients and was malignancy positive in only five of them. All patients underwent total thyroidectomy. Adjuvant radioiodine (131I) therapy was made in ten patients. Two patients died from unrelated diseases. Nine patients presented no clinical or laboratorial evidence of disease; one (PTC) developed recurrence 5 years after initial treatment and three (1 PTC, 2 MTC) have disease evidence yet. Our prognosis and clinical manifestations data are according to the literature. However, MTC prevalence (27%), sex distribution and FNA results differ from the majority of published casuistics, that can be attributed to the number of cases reported here.
...
PMID:[Thyroid cancer in childhood and adolescence--report of 15 cases]. 1576 50
Thyroid
cancers have been the main medical consequence of the Chernobyl accident. On the basis of their pathological features and of the fact that a large proportion of them demonstrate
RET
-PTC translocations, these cancers are considered as similar to classical sporadic papillary carcinomas, although molecular alterations differ between both tumours. We analysed gene expression in post-Chernobyl cancers, sporadic papillary carcinomas and compared to autonomous adenomas used as controls. Unsupervised clustering of these data did not distinguish between the cancers, but separates both cancers from adenomas. No gene signature separating sporadic from post-Chernobyl PTC (chPTC) could be found using supervised and unsupervised classification methods although such a signature is demonstrated for cancers and adenomas. Furthermore, we demonstrate that pooled RNA from sporadic and chPTC are as strongly correlated as two independent sporadic PTC pools, one from Europe, one from the US involving patients not exposed to Chernobyl radiations. This result relies on cDNA and Affymetrix microarrays. Thus, platform-specific artifacts are controlled for. Our findings suggest the absence of a radiation fingerprint in the chPTC and support the concept that post-Chernobyl cancer data, for which the cancer-causing event and its date are known, are a unique source of information to study naturally occurring papillary carcinomas.
...
PMID:Absence of a specific radiation signature in post-Chernobyl thyroid cancers. 1581 49
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