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Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors

Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is the most aggressive form of thyroid cancer, and often derives from pre-existing well-differentiated tumors. Despite a relatively low prevalence, it accounts for a disproportionate number of thyroid cancer-related deaths, due to its resistance to any therapeutic...

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Autores principales: Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico, Russo, Marika A., Dima, Mariavittoria, Kang, Kristy S., Dasrath, Florence, Liao, Xiao-Hui, Refetoff, Samuel, Montagna, Cristina, Di Cristofano, Antonio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3282070/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22190384
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author Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico
Russo, Marika A.
Dima, Mariavittoria
Kang, Kristy S.
Dasrath, Florence
Liao, Xiao-Hui
Refetoff, Samuel
Montagna, Cristina
Di Cristofano, Antonio
author_facet Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico
Russo, Marika A.
Dima, Mariavittoria
Kang, Kristy S.
Dasrath, Florence
Liao, Xiao-Hui
Refetoff, Samuel
Montagna, Cristina
Di Cristofano, Antonio
author_sort Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico
collection PubMed
description Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is the most aggressive form of thyroid cancer, and often derives from pre-existing well-differentiated tumors. Despite a relatively low prevalence, it accounts for a disproportionate number of thyroid cancer-related deaths, due to its resistance to any therapeutic approach. Here we describe the first mouse model of ATC, obtained by combining in the mouse thyroid follicular cells two molecular hallmarks of human ATC: activation of PI3K (via Pten deletion) and inactivation of p53. By 9 months of age, over 75% of the compound mutant mice develop aggressive, undifferentiated thyroid tumors that evolve from pre-existing follicular hyperplasia and carcinoma. These tumors display all the features of their human counterpart, including pleomorphism, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, aneuploidy, local invasion, and distant metastases. Expression profiling of the murine ATCs reveals a significant overlap with genes found deregulated in human ATC, including genes involved in mitosis control. Furthermore, similar to the human tumors, [Pten, p53](thyr−/−) tumors and cells are highly glycolytic and remarkably sensitive to glycolysis inhibitors, which synergize with standard chemotherapy. Taken together, our results show that combined PI3K activation and p53 loss faithfully reproduce the development of thyroid anaplastic carcinomas, and provide a compelling rationale for targeting glycolysis to increase chemotherapy response in ATC patients.
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spelling pubmed-32820702012-02-22 Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico Russo, Marika A. Dima, Mariavittoria Kang, Kristy S. Dasrath, Florence Liao, Xiao-Hui Refetoff, Samuel Montagna, Cristina Di Cristofano, Antonio Oncotarget Research Papers Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is the most aggressive form of thyroid cancer, and often derives from pre-existing well-differentiated tumors. Despite a relatively low prevalence, it accounts for a disproportionate number of thyroid cancer-related deaths, due to its resistance to any therapeutic approach. Here we describe the first mouse model of ATC, obtained by combining in the mouse thyroid follicular cells two molecular hallmarks of human ATC: activation of PI3K (via Pten deletion) and inactivation of p53. By 9 months of age, over 75% of the compound mutant mice develop aggressive, undifferentiated thyroid tumors that evolve from pre-existing follicular hyperplasia and carcinoma. These tumors display all the features of their human counterpart, including pleomorphism, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, aneuploidy, local invasion, and distant metastases. Expression profiling of the murine ATCs reveals a significant overlap with genes found deregulated in human ATC, including genes involved in mitosis control. Furthermore, similar to the human tumors, [Pten, p53](thyr−/−) tumors and cells are highly glycolytic and remarkably sensitive to glycolysis inhibitors, which synergize with standard chemotherapy. Taken together, our results show that combined PI3K activation and p53 loss faithfully reproduce the development of thyroid anaplastic carcinomas, and provide a compelling rationale for targeting glycolysis to increase chemotherapy response in ATC patients. Impact Journals LLC 2011-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3282070/ /pubmed/22190384 Text en Copyright: © 2011 Arciuch et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Arciuch, Valeria G. Antico
Russo, Marika A.
Dima, Mariavittoria
Kang, Kristy S.
Dasrath, Florence
Liao, Xiao-Hui
Refetoff, Samuel
Montagna, Cristina
Di Cristofano, Antonio
Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title_full Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title_fullStr Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title_full_unstemmed Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title_short Thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and Pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
title_sort thyrocyte-specific inactivation of p53 and pten results in anaplastic thyroid carcinomas faithfully recapitulating human tumors
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3282070/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22190384
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