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Emerging Role of Oxidative Stress on EGFR and OGG1-BER Cross-Regulation: Implications in Thyroid Physiopathology

Thyroid diseases have a complex and multifactorial aetiology. Despite the numerous studies on the signals referable to the malignant transition, the molecular mechanisms concerning the role of oxidative stress remain elusive. Based on its strong oxidative power, H(2)O(2) could be responsible for the...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Moscatello, Carmelo, Di Marcantonio, Maria Carmela, Savino, Luca, D’Amico, Emira, Spacco, Giordano, Simeone, Pasquale, Lanuti, Paola, Muraro, Raffaella, Mincione, Gabriella, Cotellese, Roberto, Aceto, Gitana Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8909339/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35269445
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11050822
Descripción
Sumario:Thyroid diseases have a complex and multifactorial aetiology. Despite the numerous studies on the signals referable to the malignant transition, the molecular mechanisms concerning the role of oxidative stress remain elusive. Based on its strong oxidative power, H(2)O(2) could be responsible for the high level of oxidative DNA damage observed in cancerous thyroid tissue and hyperactivation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and PI3K/Akt, which mediate ErbB signaling. Increased levels of 8-oxoG DNA adducts have been detected in the early stages of thyroid cancer. These DNA lesions are efficiently recognized and removed by the base excision repair (BER) pathway initiated by 8-oxoG glycosylase1 (OGG1). This study investigated the relationships between the EGFR and OGG1-BER pathways and their mutual regulation following oxidative stress stimulus by H(2)O(2) in human thyrocytes. We clarified the modulation of ErbB receptors and their downstream pathways (PI3K/Akt and MAPK/ERK) under oxidative stress (from H(2)O(2)) at the level of gene and protein expression, according to the mechanism defined in a human non-pathological cell system, Nthy-ori 3-1. Later, on the basis of the results obtained by gene expression cluster analysis in normal cells, we assessed the dysregulation of the relationships in a model of papillary thyroid cancer with RET/PTC rearrangement (TPC-1). Our observations demonstrated that a H(2)O(2) stress may induce a physiological cross-regulation between ErbB and OGG1-BER pathways in normal thyroid cells (while this is dysregulated in the TPC-1 cells). Gene expression data also delineated that MUTYH gene could play a physiological role in crosstalk between ErbB and BER pathways and this function is instead lost in cancer cells. Overall, our data on OGG1 protein expression suggest that it was physiologically regulated in response to oxidative modulation of ErbB, and that these might be dysregulated in the signaling pathway involving AKT in the progression of thyroid malignancies with RET/PTC rearrangements.