Structural studies of the thyrotropin receptor and Gs alpha in human thyroid cancers: low prevalence of mutations predicts infrequent involvement in malignant transformation.
Structural genetic changes of tumor suppressor genes MTS-1/INK4A and MTS-2/INK4B were demonstrated in a variety of human cancers but not in thyroid cancer until now.
As a first step towards investigating its possible role as a tumour suppressor gene in thyroid tumorigenesis, we have carried out a Southern blot analysis of the p16 gene locus in a series of cell lines derived from differentiated human thyroid cancers.
Intrachromosomal rearrangements involving the RET and the adjacent H4 or ELE1 gene are very frequent events in thyroid cancer of children from Belarus after the Chernobyl reactor accident (Klugbauer et al., 1995).
As a first step towards investigating its possible role as a tumour suppressor gene in thyroid tumorigenesis, we have carried out a Southern blot analysis of the p16 gene locus in a series of cell lines derived from differentiated human thyroid cancers.
The high frequency of thyroid cancer and melanoma in Japanese, not found in Caucasians, may be related to a report of linkage disequilibrium with the WRN gene in Japanese but not in Caucasians and to haplotype differences within and between the two races, suggesting multiple independent mutations.
Improved determination of variant erythrocytes at the glycophorin A (GPA) locus and variant frequency in patients treated with radioiodine for thyroid cancer.
The present study was performed to evaluate the hitherto unknown prevalence of INT-2 gene amplification and its potential usefulness as prognostic marker in patients with human thyroid cancer.
The present study was performed to evaluate the hitherto unknown prevalence of INT-2 gene amplification and its potential usefulness as prognostic marker in patients with human thyroid cancer.
Because MTS-2 encodes the tumor suppressor p15, a protein related to the transforming growth factor-beta inhibition of many epithelial cells such as thyrocytes, we investigated MTS-1 and MTS-2 genes in 87 thyroid cancers (29 papillary, 26 follicular, 31 medullary, and 1 anaplastic), 8 goiters, and 38 control DNAs by using a semiquantitative polymerase chain reaction technique.
Retinoic acid increases sodium/iodide symporter mRNA levels in human thyroid cancer cell lines and suppresses expression of functional symporter in nontransformed FRTL-5 rat thyroid cells.
We, therefore, investigated the expression of VEGF messenger RNA (mRNA) and production of VEGF protein in cell lines from human primary and metastatic follicular (FTC-133, FTC-236, and FTC-238), papillary (TPC-1), Hürthle cell (XTC-1), and medullary thyroid cancers (MTC-1.1 and MTC-2.2), and in human thyroid tissues (papillary, follicular, medullary, and Hürthle cell cancers, follicular adenomas, and Graves' thyroid tissue) by Northern blot, immunohistochemistry, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) studies.
The ZnF20 cDNA hybridized to multiple transcripts in a thyroid cancer cell line (8.0, 4.5 and 2 kb) that increased after cycloheximide treatment and decayed <2 h after addition of actinomycin D. The ZnF20 mRNA was overexpressed in three of six thyroid papillary carcinomas as compared with paired normal thyroid tissue controls.
Present data suggest that: (1) the incidence of FAP-associated thyroid cancer probably has been underestimated in the past; (2) intensive screening could detect a larger than expected number of thyroid carcinomas; (3) systematic screening is recommended in patients with ocular patches and genetic mutation in exon 15; (4) Hashimoto-like findings do not exclude carcinoma but are a frequent accompanying finding; (5) despite frequent multicentricity and early lymph node involvement, FAP-associated thyroid tumors seem to have an excellent prognosis, in particular those showing ret-PTC activation.
To circumvent these problems, we amplified thyroglobulin messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in peripheral blood using RT-PCR and compared the accuracy of this test to serum thyroglobulin immunoassay in patients with thyroid cancer.
We have shown that germline mutations of PTEN are present in individuals with two hamartoma syndromes: Cowden Syndrome, associated with a predisposition to breast and thyroid cancers, and Bannayan-Zonana syndrome.
Present data suggest that: (1) the incidence of FAP-associated thyroid cancer probably has been underestimated in the past; (2) intensive screening could detect a larger than expected number of thyroid carcinomas; (3) systematic screening is recommended in patients with ocular patches and genetic mutation in exon 15; (4) Hashimoto-like findings do not exclude carcinoma but are a frequent accompanying finding; (5) despite frequent multicentricity and early lymph node involvement, FAP-associated thyroid tumors seem to have an excellent prognosis, in particular those showing ret-PTC activation.