Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 nodule genesis may be considered as an amplification of thyroid heterogeneity due to genetic and/or epigenetic mechanisms. We classified the thyroid nodules in five types with distinct histological features: hyperplastic, neoplastic, colloid, cystic and thyroiditic nodules. Hyperplastic: Thyrocyte proliferation is under the control of TSH but several other paracrine and autocrine factors are secreted by follicular cells, the stromal apparatus and the lymphocytes, which are implicated in initiation and perpetuation of thyroid hyperplasia. Growth occurs mainly through TSHR, cAMP and PKA. Constitutive cAMP overproduction has been shown to be due to point mutation of the TSHR or Gs protein, producing overgrowth and hyperfunction. Neoplastic: Several activated oncogenes have been identified in thyroid malignancies. Oncogenes relevant to the thyroid carcinogenesis are: mutated TSHR and gsp (constitutive activation of cAMP); TRK (receptor for NGF); RET/PTC (phosphorylation of tyrosine kinase receptor)--an isoform of this oncogene is induced by radiation: ras (it encodes Gs proteins transducing mitogenic signals); and c-MET (receptor for hepatocyte growth factor). The evolution of a differentiated thyroid cancer towards an undifferentiated cancer is due to a mutation of a family of proteins (i.e., p53), which acts as a brake, preventing the genomic instability of cancer. It is suggested that a tumor initiates by RET or ras and possibly progresses--as a result of additional mutations and by p53 mutation--to anaplastic carcinoma. Colloid: Flattening of the epithelium and dilatation of follicles containing viscous material--made up by a concentrated solution of thyroglobulin (hTg)--is the characteristic of the colloid nodule. A defect of intraluminal reabsorption of hTg has been suggested but not proven. Experimentally, a load of iodine is able to change thyroid hyperplasia to a colloid feature; however, a load of iodine is rarely found in the clinical history of patients. A new clue to the pathogenesis comes from the finding that a relevant part of the colloid (10-20%) is made up of insoluble globules, where hTg is compacted in a polymeric form. It is suggested that stocking hTg into globules is defective in colloid nodules, leading to enormous enlargement of the follicle. Cystic: It is estimated that between 15 and 40% of thyroid nodules are partly or entirely cystic. The 'true cyst' is rare; most of the so-called cystic nodules are 'pseudocysts', which follow necrosis and colliquation. Necrosis issues as an imbalance between growth and the precisely regulated process of angiogenesis. More recently, the VEGF/VPF has been found to be at the origin of recent and recurrent cysts. Immunotoxic and apoptotic mechanisms have also been suggested. Chemical analysis of cystic fluid showed a 'denatured' and 'serum-like' pattern suggesting different mechanisms in the pathogenesis of the pseudocystic thyroid nodules. Thyroiditic: Nodular lymphocytic thyroiditis (NLT) includes two different entities: 1) lymphocyte thyroiditis growing as a nodule in a hyperplastic or normal gland, and 2) lymphocyte thyroiditis associated in the same nodule with other nodular diseases of the thyroid: papillary thyroid carcinoma and lymphoma have been found to be associated to chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of thyroid nodules: histological classification? 1123 84

Thyrotropin (TSH) stimulates survival and growth of thyroid cells via a seven transmembrane G protein-coupled receptor. TSH elevates the intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels activating protein kinase A (PKA). Recent evidence indicates that p21 Ras is required for TSH-induced mitogenesis, but the molecular mechanism(s) is not known. Here we report that Ras p21 activity is necessary for the Go- G1 transition in TSH induced cycle and that the downstream effector of Ras upon TSH signaling is p85-p110 PI3K. We show that PI3K inhibitors block TSH-induced DNA synthesis, cAMP-PKA stimulate the formation of the complex PI3K-p21 Ras and reduce the complex Ras-Raf1 in thyroid and other cells types. Moreover, PKA phosphorylates immunoprecipitated p85 and PKA phosphorylation of cell extracts significantly stimulates the formation of the complex PI3K-Ras. We suggest that PKA phosphorylates p85 and stabilizes the complex p110-p85, enhancing the interaction PI3K and p21 Ras. Simultaneously, cAMP inhibits Raf-1-ERK signaling by decreasing Raf1 availability to Ras. Under these circumstances PI3K signaling is favored. These results indicate that PI3K is an important mediator of Ras effects in cAMP-induced proliferation and illustrates how cAMP can selectively influence Ras effector pathways.
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PMID:cAMP signaling selectively influences Ras effectors pathways. 1131 62

A novel human thyroid papillary carcinoma cell line (FB-2) has been established and characterized. FB-2 cells harbor the RET/PTC1 chimeric oncogene in which the RET kinase domain is fused to the H4 gene. FB-2 cells neither formed colonies in semisolid media nor induced tumors after heterotransplant into severe combined immunodeficient mice. However, HMGI(Y), HMGI-C and c-myc genes, which are associated to thyroid cell transformation, were abundantly expressed in FB-2 cells but not in normal thyroid cells. FB-2 cells only partially retained the differentiated thyroid phenotype. In fact, the PAX-8 gene, which codes for a transcriptional factor required for thyroid cell differentiation, was expressed, while thyroglobulin, TSH-receptor and thyroperoxidase genes were not. Moreover, FB-2 cells produced high levels of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8.
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PMID:Establishment of a non-tumorigenic papillary thyroid cell line (FB-2) carrying the RET/PTC1 rearrangement. 1180 85

Two unusual features of the TSH receptor (TSHR) ectodomain are its intramolecular cleavage at the cell surface into disulfide-linked subunits and its constraint of ligand-independent (constitutive) activity inherent to the serpentine region. Whether ectodomain cleavage alters the level of TSHR constitutive activity is an important unanswered question. To address this issue, we used a TSHR engineered so as not to undergo spontaneous cleavage into subunits (deletion of amino acid residues 317-366 and GQE(367-369)NET substitution). Into this noncleaving TSHR (termed TSHR-D1-NET), we introduced thrombin recognition motifs (termed Thr 6 and Thr 18) at the site of spontaneous cleavage. Treatment of intact Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing TSHR-D1-NET-Thr 6 and -Thr 18 with thrombin induced cleavage into A and B subunits, as determined by (125)I-TSH covalent cross-linking. Nevertheless, constitutive activity of the thrombin-cleaved TSHR was unaltered. The level of TSHR constitutive activity was, therefore, fully dissociated from intramolecular cleavage into subunits. Trypsin treatment of the same cells expressing the noncleaving TSHR also generated disulfide-linked A and B subunits but, in contrast to thrombin, enhanced TSHR constitutive activity. Therefore, the activating effect of trypsin appears to involve clipping at an additional, as-yet unidentified, site. In summary, our data demonstrate that TSHR cleavage is, by itself, insufficient to reduce TSHR ectodomain constraint on ligand-independent constitutive activity. These data are consistent with other evidence that A subunit shedding consequent to TSHR cleavage is a critical factor in enhancing TSHR constitutive activity.
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PMID:Targeted restoration of cleavage in a noncleaving thyrotropin receptor demonstrates that cleavage is insufficient to enhance ligand-independent activity. 1263 15

Chromosomal rearrangements linking the promoter(s) and N-terminal domain of unrelated gene(s) to the C terminus of RET result in constitutively activated chimeric forms of the receptor in thyroid cells (RET/PTC). RET/PTC rearrangements are thought to be tumor-initiating events; however, the early biological consequences of RET/PTC activation are unknown. To explore this, we generated clonal lines derived from well-differentiated rat thyroid PCCL3 cells with doxycycline-inducible expression of either RET/PTC1 or RET/PTC3. As previously shown in other cell types, RET/PTC1 and RET/PTC3 oligomerized and displayed constitutive tyrosine kinase activity. Neither RET/PTC1 nor RET/PTC3 conferred cells with the ability to grow in the absence of TSH, likely because of concomitant stimulation of both DNA synthesis and apoptosis, resulting in no net growth in the cell population. Effects of RET/PTC on DNA synthesis and apoptosis did not require direct interaction of the oncoprotein with either Shc or phospholipase Cgamma. Acute expression of the oncoprotein decreased TSH-mediated growth stimulation due to interference of TSH signaling by RET/PTC at multiple levels. Taken together, these data indicate that RET/PTC is a weak tumor-initiating event and that TSH action is disrupted by this oncoprotein at several points, and also predict that secondary genetic or epigenetic changes are required for clonal expansion.
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PMID:Conditional expression of RET/PTC induces a weak oncogenic drive in thyroid PCCL3 cells and inhibits thyrotropin action at multiple levels. 1269 93

Constitutive activation of the RET proto-oncogene in papillary thyroid carcinomas results from rearrangements linking the promoter(s) and N-terminal domains of unrelated genes to the C-terminus of RET tyrosine kinase (RET/PTC). RET/PTC expression has been demonstrated to inhibit transcription of thyroid-specific genes. To study the signal transduction pathways responsible for this, we generated PCCL3 thyroid cells with doxycycline-inducible expression of RET/PTC3, RET/PTC3(Y541F), or PTC2/PDZ. Acute expression of RET/PTC(Y541F) appropriately interacted with Shc, an intermediate in the activation of the Ras pathway, but failed to activate PLCgamma. By contrast, PTC2/PDZ failed to bind Shc, but interacted normally with PLCgamma. Acute expression of RET/PTC3 or RET/PTC3(Y541F), but not PTC2/PDZ, inhibited TSH-induced Tg and NIS expression, suggesting that activation of Shc-Ras, but not PLCgamma, is required for RET/PTC-induced dedifferentiation. Accordingly, acute expression of H-Ras(V12) or of a constitutively active MEK1 also blocked TSH-induced expression of Tg and NIS. Moreover, MEK inhibitors restored Tg and NIS levels. In conclusion, activation of the Ras/Raf/MEK/MAPK pathway through Shc mediates RET/PTC-induced thyroid cell dedifferentiation. This suggests that inhibition of this pathway may promote redifferentiation in poorly differentiated thyroid carcinomas with constitutive activation of either Ras or RET/PTC.
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PMID:RET/PTC-induced dedifferentiation of thyroid cells is mediated through Y1062 signaling through SHC-RAS-MAP kinase. 1285 77

Levels of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) and its receptor, FGFR1, are elevated in goiter, but whether this is a direct effect of TSH is unknown. We have determined the regulation of FGF-2 and FGFR1 synthesis by TSH in a rat thyroid cell line (FRTL5) and have used a replication-defective adenovirus (RAd) expressing dominant negative FGFR1 (RAdDN-FGFR1) to examine the role of FGFR signaling in vitro and in goiter induced in mice. TSH induced FGF-2 and increased the expression of FGFR1 in FRTL5 cells. Infection of TSH-stimulated FRTL5 cells with RAdDN-FGFR1 inhibited growth and prevented FGF-2-mediated inhibition of (125)I uptake. Similar effects were found in primary cultures of human thyroid follicular cells. For in vivo experiments, male BALB/c mice were injected systemically with RAdDN-FGFR1 or RAd encoding green fluorescent protein, and goiter was simultaneously induced. Mouse thyroid follicles were shown to be transduced with RAd encoding green fluorescent protein. Circulating TSH was elevated comparably in the two groups. In the RAdDN-FGFR1-injected animals, goiter induced over 14 d was significantly smaller, and the vascular volume increase seen in goiter was also diminished. We conclude that the FGF axis is important in thyroid growth and that RAdDN-FGFR1 effectively blocks FGF actions, offering a means to control goitrogenesis.
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PMID:Adenovirus-mediated expression of dominant negative fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor 1 in thyroid cells blocks FGF effects and reduces goitrogenesis in mice. 1297 Mar 26

Despite multimodality treatment for thyroid cancer, including surgical resection, radioiodine therapy, thyrotropin (TSH)-suppressive thyroxine treatment, and chemotherapy/radiotherapy, survival rates have not improved over the last decades. Therefore, development and evaluation of novel treatment strategies, including gene therapy, are urgently needed. A variety of gene therapy approaches have been evaluated for the treatment of follicular cell-derived and medullary thyroid cancer, including corrective gene therapy (p53 restoration, expression of a dominant negative RET mutant), cytoreductive gene therapy (suicide gene/prodrug strategy herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase [HSV-tk]/ganciclovir, antiangiogenic therapy with endostatin) and immunomodulatory gene therapy (expression of interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-12). Furthermore, cloning of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS) gene has paved the way for the development of a novel cytoreductive gene therapy strategy based on NIS gene transfer followed by the application of radioiodine therapy ((131)I). NIS gene delivery into medullary and follicular cell-derived thyroid cancer cells has been shown to be capable of establishing or restoring radioiodine accumulation and might therefore represent an effective therapy for medullary and dedifferentiated thyroid tumors that lack iodide accumulating activity. The data summarized in this review article clearly demonstrate that the currently available strategies represent potentially curative novel therapeutic approaches for future gene therapy of thyroid cancer. The combination of different therapeutic genes has been demonstrated to be very useful to enhance therapeutic efficacy and seems to have a promising role at least as part of a multimodality approach for advanced thyroid cancer.
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PMID:Gene therapy for thyroid cancer: current status and future prospects. 1524 69

The RET/PTC3 oncogene is a genetically rearranged and constitutively activated tyrosine kinase receptor that is common in papillary thyroid cancer. Because RET/PTC3 is chronically overexpressed in these thyroid cancer cells, and RET/PTC3-expressing tumors are associated with overactivity of tyrosine kinase signaling pathways and a more aggressive clinical course, we questioned whether chronic RET/PTC3 expression enhances cellular responses to thyroid mitogens in vitro. We stably transfected FRTL-5 cells with the RET/PTC3 gene; transfected and control cell lines were cultured without insulin, TSH, or serum. Thymidine incorporation into DNA was enhanced in the RET/PTC3 cells, but transformation was not observed. RET/PTC3 cells demonstrated higher basal and insulin-stimulated levels of activated Akt, both of which were reduced by LY294002, a PI3 kinase inhibitor, but not PD98059, a MEK inhibitor. By contrast, mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) was only minimally activated in RET/PTC3 cells before and after stimulation. Consistent with preferential activation of PI3 kinase, increased levels of total and phosphorylated IRS2 protein, relative activation of PDK-1, and enhanced IRS2-p85 interactions were identified in RET/PTC3-expressing cells. RET/PTC3 cells were also sensitized to insulin-induced thymidine incorporation; this effect was blocked by PI3 kinase (LY294002) rather than MEK 1/2 (PD98059) inhibitors. In summary, we have demonstrated that RET/PTC3 expression enhances basal and insulin-stimulated DNA synthesis through PI3 kinase, cooperatively activates Akt with insulin via PI3 kinase, and preferentially activates the Akt rather than MAP kinase pathway in FRTL-5 cells.
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PMID:Chronic expression of RET/PTC 3 enhances basal and insulin-stimulated PI3 kinase/AKT signaling and increases IRS-2 expression in FRTL-5 thyroid cells. 1537 48

RET/PTC1, a thyroid-specific oncogene, has been reported to down-regulate sodium/iodide symporter (NIS) expression and function in vitro and in vivo. Recently, RET/PTC1 has been shown to interfere with TSH signaling at multiple levels in thyroid cells. The objective of this study was to investigate whether RET/PTC1-mediated NIS reduction can be rescued by activating cAMP-protein kinase A (PKA) pathways. We showed that both forskolin and 8-Br-cAMP increase radioiodide uptake and NIS protein in RET/PTC1-expressing cells to the same extent as the parental PC Cl 3 cells. We found that RET/PTC1 decreases nuclear localization of catalytic PKA, and forskolin treatment was able to counteract this RET/PTC1 effect. Furthermore, transient expression of catalytic PKA in the nucleus increased radioiodide uptake and NIS protein in RET/PTC1-expressing cells. Taken together, these studies suggest that RET/PTC1 down-regulates NIS expression by interrupting TSH/cAMP signaling, and this RET/PTC1 effect can be reversed by activating cAMP-PKA pathways.
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PMID:Forskolin, 8-Br-3',5'-cyclic adenosine 5'-monophosphate, and catalytic protein kinase A expression in the nucleus increase radioiodide uptake and sodium/iodide symporter protein levels in RET/PTC1-expressing cells. 1557 73


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