Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thyroid
tumorigenesis is discussed in the context of the thyroid as a stable tissue, composed of differentiated cells, with a greater dissociation of control of growth from control of differentiation than is found in stem cell tissues. Experimental thyroid carcinogenesis regimes usually use mutagen exposure followed by induced growth. The normal thyroid follicle cell has a limited growth capacity, so loss of one
tumour suppressor
gene followed by growth-associated loss of heterozygosity would allow escape from this growth limitation, and the formation of a neoplastic clone. In man, there are two pathways of tumour formation, one through follicular adenoma to follicular carcinoma, and one to papillary carcinoma. These two pathways show differing aetiology, and differing oncogene involvement. In the follicular carcinoma pathway TSH-induced growth is relevant as it is in experimental animals. Mutagenesis is important for both papillary and follicular carcinomas. Radiation mutagenesis is of particular current importance because of the occurrence of thyroid carcinoma in children exposed to fallout from Chernobyl. The greater capacity for post-mutagen growth in children than adults is likely to explain the increased radiosensitivity of children, both to external and internal radiation.
...
PMID:Thyroid tumorigenesis. 795 31
Thyroid
carcinomas are suitable targets for gene therapy because they can be highly lethal on one hand, while being susceptible to specific tumour targeting on the other hand. Several gene therapy modalities have been evaluated so far in experimental models of thyroid cancer, including
tumour suppressor
gene replacement, oncogene inhibition, suicide gene therapy, immunotherapy, antiangiogenesis, and viral oncolysis. All of these strategies have shown promising results, but clinical studies are lacking. Based on the clinical experience achieved in a pilot study in patients with advanced thyroid cancer and on clinical results in other types of solid cancer, it is suggested that combined gene therapy approaches, as well as multimodality therapeutic regimens, including gene therapy and conventional treatments, should be pursued to achieve clinically significant results.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for thyroid cancer. 1526 58
Thyroid
cancers are the most common endocrine malignancy. Radiation exposure, family history of thyroid cancer and some inherited conditions are the most important predisposing factors for the development of thyroid cancer. Three mitogenic signalling pathways have been described in the thyroid cell, which are influenced by various stimulatory and inhibitory hormones, growth factors and neurotransmitters. Various proto-oncogenes and oncogenes like ras, braf, trk, met and RET also play a role in the signal transduction systems. Two theories have been described in thyroid cancer pathogenesis, the foetal cell carcinogenesis theory and the more common, multistep carcinogenesis theory. The multistep carcinogenesis theory is now the accepted model in many human cancers, including thyroid cancer. The early events of tumour formation are the consequence of activation of either various growth factors or the proto-oncogenes like ras, met or ret. This results in the formation of differentiated thyroid cancers like the papillary, follicular or Hurthle cell cancers. The later stages of tumour formation involve further activation of proto-oncogenes and loss or inactivation of
tumour suppressor
genes like p53. Based on this theory, follicular carcinomas are generated from follicular adenomas and papillary carcinomas from precursor cells generated from thyrocytes. Anaplastic carcinoma may develop from papillary or follicular carcinoma by dedifferentiation. In this review article, we highlight the molecular pathogenesis of thyroid tumours.
...
PMID:Molecular pathogenesis of follicular cell derived thyroid cancers. 2009 16
Tuberous sclerosis complex (tsc), a phacomatosis, is a rare genetic disease (autosomal dominant; incidence: 1 in 6,800-17,300) associated with mutations in the
TSC1
and
TSC2
genes, 70% of which are sporadic. The disease causes benign tumours in the brain, kidneys, heart, lungs, skin, and eyes; thyroid lesions are extremely rare. A 13-year-old euthyroid boy with a hereditary form of tsc (del 4730G in
TSC2
, also seen in 2 sisters and the father) was admitted to hospital with a thyroid nodule. Physical examination revealed a nodular left lobe with increased consistency.
Thyroid
ultrasonography revealed a heterogeneous left lobe, predominantly hypoechoic with multiple microcalcifications and the presence of suspicious cervical lymph nodes on the left side. A macrocalcification was observed on the right lobe. Fine-needle biopsy results showed a few groups of cells with discrete atypical characteristics, including abundant cytoplasm, nuclei with conspicuous nucleoli, intra-nuclear inclusions, and nuclear grooves. The patient underwent total thyroidectomy with lymphadenectomy. Histopathology examination confirmed papillary thyroid carcinoma. The coincidence of endocrine neoplasia including thyroid cancer and tsc is rare, and tsc with papillary thyroid carcinoma has never been described in a child. Studies of mutations in the
tumour suppressor
genes
TSC1, TSC2,
and
STK11,
activating the mtor (mammalian target of rapamycin) pathway, might support their role in the pathogenesis of thyroid cancer.
...
PMID:Papillary thyroid carcinoma in a boy with familial tuberous sclerosis complex attributable to a
TSC2
deletion-a case report. 2908 12