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The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis

BACKGROUND: A high prevalence of thyroid papillary cancer was reported in hepatitis-C-virus (HCV) positive patients. However, the mechanistic role of hepatic-fibrosis in thyroid malignancy progressions is still unclear. AIM: We aimed to study the immune-modulatory interactions between thyroid papill...

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Autores principales: Muhanna, Nidal, Amer, Johnny, Salhab, Ahmad, Sichel, Jean-Yves, Safadi, Rifaat
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4494806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26151749
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132463
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author Muhanna, Nidal
Amer, Johnny
Salhab, Ahmad
Sichel, Jean-Yves
Safadi, Rifaat
author_facet Muhanna, Nidal
Amer, Johnny
Salhab, Ahmad
Sichel, Jean-Yves
Safadi, Rifaat
author_sort Muhanna, Nidal
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A high prevalence of thyroid papillary cancer was reported in hepatitis-C-virus (HCV) positive patients. However, the mechanistic role of hepatic-fibrosis in thyroid malignancy progressions is still unclear. AIM: We aimed to study the immune-modulatory interactions between thyroid papillary carcinoma and hepatic-fibrosis. METHODS: Hepatic-fibrosis was induced in nude-nu-male mice by intra-peritoneal administration of carbon-tetrachloride. To induce thyroid-tumor, a thyroid papillary carcinoma cell line (NPA) was injected subcutaneously in the backs. Fibrotic profile was estimated by α-smooth-muscle-actin (αSMA) expression in liver tissue extracts using western-blots and RT-PCR. Intra-hepatic NK cells were isolated and stained for NK activity (CD107a) by flow cytometry. Liver histopathology (H&E staining), thyroid tumor mass and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), serum vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and free-T4 levels were also assessed. RESULTS: Ex-vivo: NPA cells were co-cultured with intra-hepatic NK cells isolated from fibrotic mice with/without the tumor were analyzed for CFSE-proliferations. Both tumor groups (with/without hepatic-fibrosis) excreted higher serum free T4 levels. Hepatic-fibrosis increased tumor weight and size and serum free-T4 levels. In addition, tumor induction increased liver injury (both hepatic-fibrosis, necro-inflammation and serum ALT levels). In addition, tumor-bearing animals with hepatic-fibrosis had increased NK activity. NPA tumor-bearing animals increased fibrosis in spite of increased NK activity; probably due to a direct effect through increased serum free-T4 excretions. Serum VEGF levels were significantly increased in the fibrotic- bearing tumor groups compared to the non-fibrotic groups. In-vitro, NK cells from fibrotic tumor-bearing animals reduced proliferation of NPA cells. This decrease is attributed to increase NK cells activity in the fibrotic animals with the NPA tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Our results propose that NK cells although were stimulated in advanced fibrosis with tumor, they lost their anti-tumor and anti-fibrotic activity probably due to secretions of T4 and VEFG and may explain increased risk of thyroid tumors in chronic HCV patients.
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spelling pubmed-44948062015-07-15 The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis Muhanna, Nidal Amer, Johnny Salhab, Ahmad Sichel, Jean-Yves Safadi, Rifaat PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: A high prevalence of thyroid papillary cancer was reported in hepatitis-C-virus (HCV) positive patients. However, the mechanistic role of hepatic-fibrosis in thyroid malignancy progressions is still unclear. AIM: We aimed to study the immune-modulatory interactions between thyroid papillary carcinoma and hepatic-fibrosis. METHODS: Hepatic-fibrosis was induced in nude-nu-male mice by intra-peritoneal administration of carbon-tetrachloride. To induce thyroid-tumor, a thyroid papillary carcinoma cell line (NPA) was injected subcutaneously in the backs. Fibrotic profile was estimated by α-smooth-muscle-actin (αSMA) expression in liver tissue extracts using western-blots and RT-PCR. Intra-hepatic NK cells were isolated and stained for NK activity (CD107a) by flow cytometry. Liver histopathology (H&E staining), thyroid tumor mass and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), serum vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and free-T4 levels were also assessed. RESULTS: Ex-vivo: NPA cells were co-cultured with intra-hepatic NK cells isolated from fibrotic mice with/without the tumor were analyzed for CFSE-proliferations. Both tumor groups (with/without hepatic-fibrosis) excreted higher serum free T4 levels. Hepatic-fibrosis increased tumor weight and size and serum free-T4 levels. In addition, tumor induction increased liver injury (both hepatic-fibrosis, necro-inflammation and serum ALT levels). In addition, tumor-bearing animals with hepatic-fibrosis had increased NK activity. NPA tumor-bearing animals increased fibrosis in spite of increased NK activity; probably due to a direct effect through increased serum free-T4 excretions. Serum VEGF levels were significantly increased in the fibrotic- bearing tumor groups compared to the non-fibrotic groups. In-vitro, NK cells from fibrotic tumor-bearing animals reduced proliferation of NPA cells. This decrease is attributed to increase NK cells activity in the fibrotic animals with the NPA tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Our results propose that NK cells although were stimulated in advanced fibrosis with tumor, they lost their anti-tumor and anti-fibrotic activity probably due to secretions of T4 and VEFG and may explain increased risk of thyroid tumors in chronic HCV patients. Public Library of Science 2015-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4494806/ /pubmed/26151749 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132463 Text en © 2015 Muhanna et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Muhanna, Nidal
Amer, Johnny
Salhab, Ahmad
Sichel, Jean-Yves
Safadi, Rifaat
The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title_full The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title_fullStr The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title_full_unstemmed The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title_short The Immune Interplay between Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma and Hepatic Fibrosis
title_sort immune interplay between thyroid papillary carcinoma and hepatic fibrosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4494806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26151749
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132463
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