76 research outputs found

    Papillary carcinoma of the thyroid: methylation is not involved in the regulation of MET expression

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    Hypomethylation has been reported to be responsible for the activation of several oncogenes. The possibility that hypomethylation is involved in the regulation of MET transcription was investigated through the analysis of the methylation status of one CpG island containing 43 CpGs in six cases of papillary carcinoma, in the corresponding normal thyroid tissue, and in two cases of hyperplastic goitre. Evidence of methylation was not found in any of the analysed CpG. © 2004 Cancer Research UK

    K-ras mutations in sinonasal cancers in relation to wood dust exposure

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Cancer in the sinonasal tract is rare, but persons who have been occupationally exposed to wood dust have a substantially increased risk. It has been estimated that approximately 3.6 million workers are exposed to inhalable wood dust in EU. In previous small studies of this cancer, <it>ras </it>mutations were suggested to be related to wood dust exposure, but these studies were too limited to detect statistically significant associations.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We examined 174 cases of sinonasal cancer diagnosed in Denmark in the period from 1991 to 2001. To ensure uniformity, all histological diagnoses were carefully reviewed pathologically before inclusion. Paraffin embedded tumour samples from 58 adenocarcinomas, 109 squamous cell carcinomas and 7 other carcinomas were analysed for K-<it>ras </it>codon 12, 13 and 61 point mutations by restriction fragment length polymorphisms and direct sequencing. Information on occupational exposure to wood dust and to potential confounders was obtained from telephone interviews and from registry data.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Among the patients in this study, exposure to wood dust was associated with a 21-fold increased risk of having an adenocarcinoma than a squamous cell carcinoma compared to unexposed [OR = 21.0, CI = 8.0–55.0]. K-<it>ras </it>was mutated in 13% of the adenocarcinomas (seven patients) and in 1% of squamous cell carcinomas (one patient). Of these eight mutations, five mutations were located in the codon 12. The exact sequence change of remaining three could not be identified unambiguously. Among the five identified mutations, the G→A transition was the most common, and it was present in tumour tissue from two wood dust exposed adenocarcinoma patients and one patient with unknown exposure. Previously published studies of sinonasal cancer also identify the GGT → GAT transition as the most common and often related to wood dust exposure.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Patients exposed to wood dust seemed more likely to develop adenocarcinoma compared to squamous cell carcinomas. K-<it>ras </it>mutations were detected in 13% of adenocarcinomas. In this study and previously published studies of sinonasal cancer the found K-<it>ras </it>mutations, were almost exclusively G → A transitions. In conclusion, our study, based on a large representative collection of human SNC tumours, indicates that K-<it>ras </it>mutations are relatively infrequent, and most commonly occur in adenocarcinomas. Wood dust exposure alone was not found to be explanatory for the G→A mutations, but combination of exposure to tobacco, wood dust, and possibly other occupational agents may be a more likely explanation. Overall, the study suggests a limited role for K-<it>ras </it>mutations in development of sinonasal cancer.</p

    A Potent Inhibitor of SIK2, 3, 3′, 7-Trihydroxy-4′-Methoxyflavon (4′-O-Methylfisetin), Promotes Melanogenesis in B16F10 Melanoma Cells

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    Flavonoids, which are plant polyphenols, are now widely used in supplements and cosmetics. Here, we report that 4′-methylflavonoids are potent inducers of melanogenesis in B16F10 melanoma cells and in mice. We recently identified salt inducible kinase 2 (SIK2) as an inhibitor of melanogenesis via the suppression of the cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB)-specific coactivator 1 (TORC1). Using an in vitro kinase assay targeting SIK2, we identified fisetin as a candidate inhibitor, possibly being capable of promoting melanogenesis. However, fisetin neither inhibited the CREB-inhibitory activity of SIK2 nor promoted melanogenesis in B16F10 melanoma cells. Conversely, mono-methyl-flavonoids, such as diosmetin (4′-O-metlylluteolin), efficiently inhibited SIK2 and promoted melanogenesis in this cell line. The cAMP-CREB system is impaired in Ay/a mice and these mice have yellow hair as a result of pheomelanogenesis, while Sik2+/−; Ay/a mice also have yellow hair, but activate eumelanogenesis when they are exposed to CREB stimulators. Feeding Sik2+/−; Ay/a mice with diets supplemented with fisetin resulted in their hair color changing to brown, and metabolite analysis suggested the presence of mono-methylfisetin in their feces. Thus, we decided to synthesize 4′-O-methylfisetin (4′MF) and found that 4′MF strongly induced melanogenesis in B16F10 melanoma cells, which was accompanied by the nuclear translocation of TORC1, and the 4′-O-methylfisetin-induced melanogenic programs were inhibited by the overexpression of dominant negative TORC1. In conclusion, compounds that modulate SIK2 cascades are helpful to regulate melanogenesis via TORC1 without affecting cAMP levels, and the combined analysis of Sik2+/− mice and metabolites from these mice is an effective strategy to identify beneficial compounds to regulate CREB activity in vivo

    Siva-1 emerges as a tissue-specific oncogene beyond its classic role of a proapoptotic gene

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    Jiri Vachtenheim, Jr,1 Robert Lischke,1 Jiri Vachtenheim2 1Third Department of Surgery, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University Prague and University Hospital Motol, Prague, Czech Republic; 2Department of Transcription and Cell Signaling, Institute of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Diagnostics, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic Abstract: Siva-1 is a typical apoptotic protein commonly activated by the p53 tumor suppressor protein and should therefore participate in a barrier against the development of cancer. It has proapoptotic activities in various cell systems. Recent findings suggest that Siva-1 possesses several other apoptosis-independent functions and interacts with many other proteins not directly involved in apoptosis. It harbors the ARF E3 ubiquitin protein ligase activity, a property that is clearly prooncogenic and leads to p53 degradation through the upregulation of the Hdm2 protein level. Surprisingly, recent evidence shows that Siva-1 absence prevents the development of non-small cell lung carcinomas in a mouse model and reveals the oncogenic roles in the same types of human cells, indicating its unique function as an oncogene in the cell context-dependent manner. Herein, we review reported activities of Siva-1 in various experimental settings and comment on its ambiguous function in tumor biology. Keywords: Siva-1, apoptosis, CD27, p53, NSCL

    Transcriptional repression of the microphthalmia gene in melanoma cells correlates with the unresponsiveness of target genes to ectopic microphthalmia-associated transcription factor.

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    In the melanocyte, expression of genes required for pigment formation is mediated by the microphthalmia transcription factor, which is also critical for the development and survival of normal melanocytes during embryogenesis. Here we show that the expression of the melanocyte-specific isoform of microphthalmia transcription factor is lost in a subset of human melanoma cell lines, accompanied by the repression of tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related proteins 1 and 2, the three transcriptional target genes for microphthalmia. After the forced expression of microphthalmia transcription factor in melanoma cells where the expression of endogenous microphthalmia gene was found to be extinguished, no restoration of the melanogenic phenotype occurred and the transcription of the three microphthalmia transcription factor target genes remained silent. The transcription activation domain of microphthalmia transcription factor, tested as a GAL-MITF fusion protein, remained fully functional in these cells, however, and ectopic microphthalmia transcription factor localized normally to the nucleus and bound to the tyrosinase initiator E-box in gel retardation assays. Thus, the block of differentiation in microphthalmia-transcription-factor-negative melanomas extended the transcriptional repression of the microphthalmia transcription factor gene alone, and endogenous promoters in these melanoma cells became no longer responsive to microphthalmia transcription factor when this was substituted exogenously. The data presented suggest that a specific nuclear context is required for the transcriptional activation of the melanocyte markers by the microphthalmia transcription factor in malignant melanocytes and this specificity is lost concomitantly with the transcriptional repression of microphthalmia transcription factor.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tSCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    The Microphthalmia gene product interacts with the retinoblastoma protein in vitro and is a target for deregulation of melanocyte-specific transcription.

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    Little is known of the molecular mechanisms underlying the differentiation of the melanocyte from the melanoblast or the progression from the melanocyte to a malignant melanoma. Since the adenovirus E1A products have proved a useful tool for understanding control of differentiation in other systems, we explored the possibility of using E1A as a probe for factors controlling melanocyte-specific gene expression and differentiation. The results obtained show that the adenovirus E1A 13S, but not the 12S, product can transform the highly pigmented and TPA-dependent melanocyte cell line melan-a. Transformation is characterised by a morphological change, loss of TPA-dependence, the ability to grow in soft agar and strikingly, loss of pigmentation which correlates with loss of expression of the melanocyte-specific TRP-1 and tyrosinase genes. Cotransfection assays demonstrated that repression of TRP-1 by E1A correlated with E1A binding to p105Rb and p300, with the target in the TRP-1 promoter being the M-box, and 11 bp basic-Helix-loop-Helix (bHLH) factor-binding motif conserved between melanocyte-specific promoters. Consistent with the M-box acting as a target for E1a-mediated transcription repression, we also show that the basic-helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper (bHLH-LZ) protein (Mi) encoded by the microphthalmia gene (mi), which is required for pigment cell differentiation, is a positive acting transcription factor which can interact with the retinoblastoma product in vitro and activate the TRP-1 promoter. Moreover, expression of the mi gene was reduced around 50-fold in the non-pigmented E1a-transformed melan-a cells compared to the nontransformed melan-a cell line, with ectopic expression of Mi able to prevent repression of the tyrosinase and TRP-1 promoters in the presence of E1A. Mi therefore appears to play a crucial role in melanocyte-specific gene expression. The parallels between repression of myogenesis and muscle cell bHLH factors, and Mi and melanocyte differentiation are discussed
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