58 research outputs found

    FGF23 and primary hyperparathyroidism: is there a link?

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    Introduction: Data regarding the role of fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) in primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) are scarce and discordant. Our study aimed to evaluate the prognostic impact of FGF23 upon the clinical and biochemical evolution of PHPT. Material and methods: Forty-two patients with ages between 30 and 80 years, diagnosed with PHPT caused by a sporadic, solitary parathyroid adenoma, and referred to surgery (minimally invasive parathyroidectomy) were prospectively included in the study. Serum levels of FGF23, PTH, 25(OH)D3, calcium (Ca), phosphate (P), total procollagen type 1 N-terminal propeptide, and C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen were determined at baseline (preoperatory), one day after surgery, and in 13 patients also prospectively at three, six, and 12 months. Bone mineral density (BMD) was also evaluated before surgery in all patients and 12 months after surgery in the 13followed up patients. Results: In the 42 PHPT patients with D hypovitaminosis (mean 25(OH)D3 levels of 16.2 ± 1.5 ng/mL), preoperatory serum FGF23 concentration was within the normal range (75.55 ± 3.39 pg/mL) and remained unchanged one day post operation (81.69 ± 4.67 pg/mL, p = non-significant). The 13 patients followed prospectively for up to 12 months after surgery also showed unmodified FGF23 levels (80.9 ± 11.03 pg/mL, p = non-significant), despite PTH and Ca normalisation and vitamin D replenishment. Preoperatory FGF23 negatively correlated with PTH (r = –0.37, p = 0.038), but not with 25(OH)D3, Ca, P, bone mass, or metabolism markers. Conclusions: In PHPT, correlations between FGF23 and PTH seem rather an epiphenomenon. Therefore, we think that FGF23 evaluation and dynamics are not informative regarding PHPT severity. (Endokrynol Pol 2020; 71 (4): 306–312

    Relationship Between the Extent of Chromosomal Losses and the Pattern of CpG Methylation in Gastric Carcinomas

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    The extent of unilateral chromosomal losses and the presence of microsatellite instability (MSI) have been classified into high-risk (high- and baseline-level loss) and low-risk (low-level loss and MSI) stem-line genotypes in gastric carcinomas. A unilateral genome-dosage reduction might stimulate compensation mechanism, which maintains the genomic dosage via CpG hypomethylation. A total of 120 tumor sites from 40 gastric carcinomas were examined by chromosomal loss analysis using 40 microsatellite markers on 8 chromosomes and methylation analysis in the 13 CpG (island/non-island) regions near the 10 genes using the bisulfite-modified DNAs. The high-level-loss tumor (four or more losses) showed a tendency toward unmethylation in the Maspin, CAGE, MAGE-A2 and RABGEF1 genes, and the other microsatellite-genotype (three or fewer losses and MSI) toward methylation in the p16, hMLH1, RASSF1A, and Cyclin D2 genes (p<0.05). The non-island CpGs of the p16 and hMLH1 genes were hypomethylated in the high-level-loss and hypermethylated in the non-high-level-loss sites (p<0.05). Consequently, hypomethylation changes were related to a high-level loss, whereas the hypermethylation changes were accompanied by a baseline-level loss, a low-level loss, or a MSI. This indicates that hypomethylation compensates the chromosomal losses in the process of tumor progression

    Lack of increases in methylation at three CpG-rich genomic loci in non-mitotic adult tissues during aging

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Cell division occurs during normal human development and aging. Despite the likely importance of cell division to human pathology, it has been difficult to infer somatic cell mitotic ages (total numbers of divisions since the zygote) because direct counting of lifetime numbers of divisions is currently impractical. Here we attempt to infer relative mitotic ages with a molecular clock hypothesis. Somatic genomes may record their mitotic ages because greater numbers of replication errors should accumulate after greater numbers of divisions. Mitotic ages will vary between cell types if they divide at different times and rates.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Age-related increases in DNA methylation at specific CpG sites (termed "epigenetic molecular clocks") have been previously observed in mitotic human epithelium like the intestines and endometrium. These CpG rich sequences or "tags" start unmethylated and potentially changes in methylation during development and aging represent replication errors. To help distinguish between mitotic versus time-associated changes, DNA methylation tag patterns at 8–20 CpGs within three different genes, two on autosomes and one on the X-chromosome were measured by bisulfite sequencing from heart, brain, kidney and liver of autopsies from 21 individuals of different ages.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Levels of DNA methylation were significantly greater in adult compared to fetal or newborn tissues for two of the three examined tags. Consistent with the relative absence of cell division in these adult tissues, there were no significant increases in tag methylation after infancy.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Many somatic methylation changes at certain CpG rich regions or tags appear to represent replication errors because this methylation increases with chronological age in mitotic epithelium but not in non-mitotic organs. Tag methylation accumulates differently in different tissues, consistent with their expected genealogies and mitotic ages. Although further studies are necessary, these results suggest numbers of divisions and ancestry are at least partially recorded by epigenetic replication errors within somatic cell genomes.</p

    Increased chromosomal stability in cultures of ovarian tumours of low malignant potential compared to cystadenomas

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    Cell cultures of ovarian cystadenomas transfected with SV40 large T antigen are not immortal because they invariably reach a phenomenon called crisis, which is triggered in part by telomere attrition. Recovery from crisis may be an integral component of the malignant transformation process. We reported earlier that such ovarian cystadenoma cell cultures undergo severe changes in DNA ploidy as they approach crisis and that such changes are an important determinant of crisis independent of telomere attrition. Here, we show that in sharp contrast to these benign ovarian tumours, the DNA content of ovarian tumours of low malignant potential (LMP) was remarkably stable as they approached crisis, suggesting that telomere attrition was the main determinant of this mortality checkpoint. Lack of a ploidy-based crisis was not due to loss of expression of a functional SV40 large T antigen protein. We conclude that ovarian LMP tumours are characterised by increased numerical chromosomal stability compared to cystadenomas. This might account for the fact that most LMP tumours are diploid or near diploid in vivo. This fundamental difference in chromosomal stability between ovarian cystadenomas and LMP tumours also suggests potential differences in predisposition to progression to malignancy between these two ovarian tumour subtypes

    Transcriptional Repressive H3K9 and H3K27 Methylations Contribute to DNMT1-Mediated DNA Methylation Recovery

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    DNA methylation and histone modifications are two major epigenetic events regulating gene expression and chromatin structure, and their alterations are linked to human carcinogenesis. DNA methylation plays an important role in tumor suppressor gene inactivation, and can be revised by DNA methylation inhibitors. The reversible nature of DNA methylation forms the basis of epigenetic cancer therapy. However, it has been reported that DNA re-methylation and gene re-silencing could occur after removal of demethylation treatment and this may significantly hamper the therapeutic value of DNA methylation inhibitors. In this study we have provided detailed evidence demonstrating that mammalian cells possess a bona fide DNA methylation recovery system. We have also shown that DNA methylation recovery was mediated by the major human DNA methyltransferase, DNMT1. In addition, we found that H3K9-tri-methylation and H3K27-tri-methylation were closely associated with this DNA methylation recovery. These persistent transcriptional repressive histone modifications may have a crucial role in regulating DNMT1-mediated DNA methylation recovery. Our findings may have important implications towards a better understanding of epigenetic regulation and future development of epigenetic therapeutic intervention

    Magnetic Properties of the Sm(Co, Fe, Ni) System

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