Cargando…

Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling

BACKGROUND: Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) frequently presents as multiple tumour-foci within a single thyroid gland or pluriform, with synchronous tumours comprising different histological variants, raising questions regarding its clonality. Among the genetic aberrations described in PTC, the BR...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Aherne, Sinéad T, Smyth, Paul C, Flavin, Richard J, Russell, Susan M, Denning, Karen M, Li, Jing Huan, Guenther, Simone M, O'Leary, John J, Sheils, Orla M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2612696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19055826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-89
_version_ 1782163135160909824
author Aherne, Sinéad T
Smyth, Paul C
Flavin, Richard J
Russell, Susan M
Denning, Karen M
Li, Jing Huan
Guenther, Simone M
O'Leary, John J
Sheils, Orla M
author_facet Aherne, Sinéad T
Smyth, Paul C
Flavin, Richard J
Russell, Susan M
Denning, Karen M
Li, Jing Huan
Guenther, Simone M
O'Leary, John J
Sheils, Orla M
author_sort Aherne, Sinéad T
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) frequently presents as multiple tumour-foci within a single thyroid gland or pluriform, with synchronous tumours comprising different histological variants, raising questions regarding its clonality. Among the genetic aberrations described in PTC, the BRAF V600E mutation and ret/PTC activation occur most commonly. Several studies have investigated the genetic alteration status of multifocal thyroid tumours, with discordant results. To address the question of clonality this study examined disparate geographical and morphological areas from a single PTC (classic PTC, insular and anaplastic foci, and tumour cells adjacent to vascular invasion and lymphocytic infiltrate) for the presence of ret/PTC 1 or BRAF mutations. Moreover, we wanted to investigate the consistency of miRNA signatures within disparate areas of a tumour, and geographical data was further correlated with expression profiles of 330 different miRNAs. Putative miRNA gene targets were predicted for differentially regulated miRNAs and immunohistochemistry was performed on tissue sections in an effort to investigate phenotypic variations in microvascular density (MVD), and cytokeratin and p53 protein expression levels. RESULTS: All of the morphological areas proved negative for ret/PTC 1 rearrangement. Two distinct foci with classic morphology harboured the BRAF mutation. All other regions, including the insular and anaplastic areas were negative for the mutation. MiRNA profiles were found to distinguish tumours containing the BRAF mutation from the other tumour types, and to differentiate between the more aggressive insular & anaplastic tumours, and the classic variant. Our data corroborated miRNAs previously discovered in this carcinoma, and additional miRNAs linked to various processes involved in tumour growth and proliferation. CONCLUSION: The initial genetic alteration analysis indicated that pluriform PTC did not necessarily evolve from classic PTC progenitor foci. Analysis of miRNA profiles however provided an interesting variation on the clonality question. While hierarchical clustering analysis of miRNA expression supported the hypothesis that discrete areas did not evolve from clonal expansion of tumour cells, it did not exclude the possibility of independent mutational events suggesting both phenomena might occur simultaneously within a tumour to enhance cancer progression in geographical micro-environments within a tumour.
format Text
id pubmed-2612696
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-26126962008-12-31 Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling Aherne, Sinéad T Smyth, Paul C Flavin, Richard J Russell, Susan M Denning, Karen M Li, Jing Huan Guenther, Simone M O'Leary, John J Sheils, Orla M Mol Cancer Research BACKGROUND: Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) frequently presents as multiple tumour-foci within a single thyroid gland or pluriform, with synchronous tumours comprising different histological variants, raising questions regarding its clonality. Among the genetic aberrations described in PTC, the BRAF V600E mutation and ret/PTC activation occur most commonly. Several studies have investigated the genetic alteration status of multifocal thyroid tumours, with discordant results. To address the question of clonality this study examined disparate geographical and morphological areas from a single PTC (classic PTC, insular and anaplastic foci, and tumour cells adjacent to vascular invasion and lymphocytic infiltrate) for the presence of ret/PTC 1 or BRAF mutations. Moreover, we wanted to investigate the consistency of miRNA signatures within disparate areas of a tumour, and geographical data was further correlated with expression profiles of 330 different miRNAs. Putative miRNA gene targets were predicted for differentially regulated miRNAs and immunohistochemistry was performed on tissue sections in an effort to investigate phenotypic variations in microvascular density (MVD), and cytokeratin and p53 protein expression levels. RESULTS: All of the morphological areas proved negative for ret/PTC 1 rearrangement. Two distinct foci with classic morphology harboured the BRAF mutation. All other regions, including the insular and anaplastic areas were negative for the mutation. MiRNA profiles were found to distinguish tumours containing the BRAF mutation from the other tumour types, and to differentiate between the more aggressive insular & anaplastic tumours, and the classic variant. Our data corroborated miRNAs previously discovered in this carcinoma, and additional miRNAs linked to various processes involved in tumour growth and proliferation. CONCLUSION: The initial genetic alteration analysis indicated that pluriform PTC did not necessarily evolve from classic PTC progenitor foci. Analysis of miRNA profiles however provided an interesting variation on the clonality question. While hierarchical clustering analysis of miRNA expression supported the hypothesis that discrete areas did not evolve from clonal expansion of tumour cells, it did not exclude the possibility of independent mutational events suggesting both phenomena might occur simultaneously within a tumour to enhance cancer progression in geographical micro-environments within a tumour. BioMed Central 2008-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2612696/ /pubmed/19055826 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-89 Text en Copyright © 2008 Aherne et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Aherne, Sinéad T
Smyth, Paul C
Flavin, Richard J
Russell, Susan M
Denning, Karen M
Li, Jing Huan
Guenther, Simone M
O'Leary, John J
Sheils, Orla M
Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title_full Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title_fullStr Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title_full_unstemmed Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title_short Geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & miRNA profiling
title_sort geographical mapping of a multifocal thyroid tumour using genetic alteration analysis & mirna profiling
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2612696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19055826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-89
work_keys_str_mv AT ahernesineadt geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT smythpaulc geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT flavinrichardj geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT russellsusanm geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT denningkarenm geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT lijinghuan geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT guenthersimonem geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT olearyjohnj geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling
AT sheilsorlam geographicalmappingofamultifocalthyroidtumourusinggeneticalterationanalysismirnaprofiling