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Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin

Targeted radioiodine therapy for thyroid cancer is based on selective stimulation of Na(+)/I(−) Symporter (NIS)-mediated radioactive iodide uptake (RAIU) in thyroid cells by thyrotropin. Patients with advanced thyroid cancer do not benefit from radioiodine therapy due to reduced or absent NIS expres...

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Autores principales: Lakshmanan, Aparna, Scarberry, Daniel, Green, Jill A., Zhang, Xiaoli, Selmi-Ruby, Samia, Jhiang, Sissy M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26397139
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author Lakshmanan, Aparna
Scarberry, Daniel
Green, Jill A.
Zhang, Xiaoli
Selmi-Ruby, Samia
Jhiang, Sissy M.
author_facet Lakshmanan, Aparna
Scarberry, Daniel
Green, Jill A.
Zhang, Xiaoli
Selmi-Ruby, Samia
Jhiang, Sissy M.
author_sort Lakshmanan, Aparna
collection PubMed
description Targeted radioiodine therapy for thyroid cancer is based on selective stimulation of Na(+)/I(−) Symporter (NIS)-mediated radioactive iodide uptake (RAIU) in thyroid cells by thyrotropin. Patients with advanced thyroid cancer do not benefit from radioiodine therapy due to reduced or absent NIS expression. To identify inhibitors that can be readily translated into clinical care, we examined oncological pipeline inhibitors targeting Akt, MEK, PI3K, Hsp90 or BRAF in their ability to increase RAIU in thyroid cells expressing BRAF(V600E) or RET/PTC3 oncogene. Our data showed that (1) PI3K inhibitor GDC-0941 outperformed other inhibitors in RAIU increase mainly by decreasing iodide efflux rate to a great extent; (2) RAIU increase by all inhibitors was extensively reduced by TGF-β, a cytokine secreted in the invasive fronts of thyroid cancers; (3) RAIU reduction by TGF-β was mainly mediated by NIS reduction and could be reversed by Apigenin, a plant-derived flavonoid; and (4) In the presence of TGF-β, GDC-0941 with Apigenin co-treatment had the highest RAIU level in both BRAF(V600E) expressing cells and RET/PTC3 expressing cells. Taken together, Apigenin may serve as a dietary supplement along with small molecule inhibitors to improve radioiodine therapeutic efficacy on invasive tumor margins thereby minimizing future metastatic events.
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spelling pubmed-47416402016-03-03 Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin Lakshmanan, Aparna Scarberry, Daniel Green, Jill A. Zhang, Xiaoli Selmi-Ruby, Samia Jhiang, Sissy M. Oncotarget Research Paper Targeted radioiodine therapy for thyroid cancer is based on selective stimulation of Na(+)/I(−) Symporter (NIS)-mediated radioactive iodide uptake (RAIU) in thyroid cells by thyrotropin. Patients with advanced thyroid cancer do not benefit from radioiodine therapy due to reduced or absent NIS expression. To identify inhibitors that can be readily translated into clinical care, we examined oncological pipeline inhibitors targeting Akt, MEK, PI3K, Hsp90 or BRAF in their ability to increase RAIU in thyroid cells expressing BRAF(V600E) or RET/PTC3 oncogene. Our data showed that (1) PI3K inhibitor GDC-0941 outperformed other inhibitors in RAIU increase mainly by decreasing iodide efflux rate to a great extent; (2) RAIU increase by all inhibitors was extensively reduced by TGF-β, a cytokine secreted in the invasive fronts of thyroid cancers; (3) RAIU reduction by TGF-β was mainly mediated by NIS reduction and could be reversed by Apigenin, a plant-derived flavonoid; and (4) In the presence of TGF-β, GDC-0941 with Apigenin co-treatment had the highest RAIU level in both BRAF(V600E) expressing cells and RET/PTC3 expressing cells. Taken together, Apigenin may serve as a dietary supplement along with small molecule inhibitors to improve radioiodine therapeutic efficacy on invasive tumor margins thereby minimizing future metastatic events. Impact Journals LLC 2015-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4741640/ /pubmed/26397139 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Lakshmanan 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 Paper
Lakshmanan, Aparna
Scarberry, Daniel
Green, Jill A.
Zhang, Xiaoli
Selmi-Ruby, Samia
Jhiang, Sissy M.
Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title_full Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title_fullStr Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title_full_unstemmed Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title_short Modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and Apigenin
title_sort modulation of thyroidal radioiodide uptake by oncological pipeline inhibitors and apigenin
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26397139
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