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Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Iii-sciences De La Vie-life Sciences | 1999

Irradiation and second cancers. The thyroid as a case in point

Martin Schlumberger; Anne-Françoise Cailleux; Horacio Suarez; Florent de Vathaire

The thyroid gland is highly sensitive to radiation during childhood: the risk of thyroid tumours is increased for mean doses as low as 100 mGy and for higher doses, the risk increases linearly with the dose. Excess relative risk is important, being 7.7 for 1 Gy delivered to the thyroid gland during childhood. The risk of thyroid tumours is modified by several factors: a) age at exposure: in childhood, the risk decreases with increasing age at exposure and is not significant after 20 years; b) gender: females are two times more likely than males to develop thyroid tumours; c) genetic predisposition due to a defect in DNA repair mechanisms, and dietary and hormonal factors may modify the risk; d) the influence of fractionation and dose rate is not well established. Radioiodine 131 (1311) used for medical purposes has almost no tumourigenic effect on the adult thyroid gland. The consequences of the Chernobyl accident have clearly shown that the risk of thyroid cancer after exposure to 1311 in childhood is important, and that such exposure should be prevented by potassium iodine prophylaxis. RET/PTC rearrangements are found in 60-80% of papillary carcinomas and in 45% of adenomas occurring after radiation exposure. They are found in 5-15% of papillary carcinoma and in no follicular adenomas that occurred in the absence of radiation exposure.


British Journal of Cancer | 2002

Association of RET codon 691 polymorphism in radiation-induced human thyroid tumours with C-cell hyperplasia in peritumoural tissue

A Bounacer; J A Du Villard; R Wicker; Bernard Caillou; M. Schlumberger; A Sarasin; Horacio Suarez

The RET proto-oncogene encodes a protein structurally related to transmembrane receptors with an intracellular tyrosine kinase domain. In human thyroid gland, the RET proto-oncogene is normally expressed in parafollicular C-cells. Thyroid C-cell hyperplasia is associated with inherited medullary thyroid carcinomas and is considered as a pre-neoplastic stage of C-cells disease. It has also been observed in thyroid tissues adjacent to follicular and papillary carcinomas. In order to study the relationship between a misfunctioning of the RET proto-oncogene and the presence of C-cell hyperplasia, we compared a series of thyroid glands presenting sporadic or radiation-associated tumours, as well as samples of unrelated normal thyroid tissues, for alteration in exons 10 and 11 of the gene and for the presence or absence of C-cell hyperplasia. Here we report a significantly higher frequency of C-cell hyperplasia present in peritumoural thyroid tissues of radiation-induced epithelial thyroid tumours, than in peritumoural of sporadic thyroid tumours or in control normal thyroid tissues (P=0.001). A G691S RET polymorphism was present with a higher frequency in radiation-induced epithelial thyroid tumours (55%) than in sporadic tumours (20%) and in control normal thyroid tissues (15%). Interestingly, this polymorphism was associated in the majority (88%) of radiation-induced tumours with a C-cell hyperplasia in the peritumoural tissues. Several explanations for this association are discussed.


Oncogene | 2000

Role of the cAMP and MAPK pathways in the transformation of mouse 3T3 fibroblasts by a TSHR gene constitutively activated by point mutation.

J A Du Villard; R Wicker; Piero Crespo; Diego Russo; Sebastiano Filetti; Gutkind Js; A Sarasin; Horacio Suarez

Constitutive activating mutations of the TSHR gene, have been detected in about 30 per cent of hyperfunctioning human thyroid adenomas and in a minority of differentiated thyroid carcinomas. The mutations activating the TSHR gene(s) in the thyroid carcinomas, were located at the codon 623 changing an Ala to a Ser (GCC→TCC) or in codon 632 changing a Thr to Ala or Ile (ACC→GCC or ACC→ATC). In order to study if the constitutively activated TSHR gene(s) has played a role in the determination of the malignant phenotype presented by these tumors, we investigated: (1) the transforming capacity after transfection of mouse 3T3 cells, of a TSHR cDNA activated by an Ala→Ser mutation in codon 623 or an Thr→lle mutation in codon 632 and (2) the pathway(s) eventually responsable(s) for the malignant phenotype of the cells transformed by these constitutively activated TSHR cDNAs. Our results show that (1) the TSHRM623 orM632 cDNAs give rise to 3T3 clones presenting a fully neoplastic phenotype (growth in agar and nude mouse tumorigenesis); this phenotype was weaker in the cells transformed by the 632 cDNA; (2) suggest that the fully transformed phenotype of our 3T3 cells, may be the consequence of the additive effect of the activation of at least two different pathways: the cAMP pathway through Gαs and the Ras dependent MAPK pathway through Gβγ and PI3K and (3) show that the PI3K isoform playing a key role as an effector in the MAPK pathway activation in our 3T3-transformed cells is PI3Kγ. Signaling from PI3Kγ to MAPK appears to require in our murine cellular system a tyrosine kinase (still not characterized), Shc, Grb2, Sos, Ras and Raf. It is proposed that the constitutively activated TSHR genes detected in the thyroid carcinomas, may have played an oncogenic role, participating in their development through these two pathways.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Cloning and expression of human adenylyl cyclase type VI in normal thyroid tissues.

R Wicker; Ana Gascon Catalan; Anne-Franc°oise Cailleux; Dimitri Starenki; Dominique Stengel; Alain Sarasin; Horacio Suarez

The adenylyl cyclase type VI gene expressed in human normal thyroid tissue was cloned and sequenced. The cDNA sequence (6463 nt) is susceptible to code for a 1168 aa protein. Northern blots using specific probes showed that the expression of adenylyl cyclase type VI gene was significantly higher in one hyperfunctioning thyroid tumor than in normal thyroid tissue, in one follicular cold adenoma or in one papillary carcinoma.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1995

Cloning and sequencing of a tpr-met oncogene cDNA isolated from MNNG-transformed human XP fibroblasts

R Wicker; Ali Bounacer; Ana Gascon; Olivier Brison; Alain Sarasin; Horacio Suarez

A rearranged tpr-met oncogene was identified in a MNNG-transformed human Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cell line (ASKMN). A 2016 bp cDNA was cloned and sequenced, disclosing an ORF with a coding capacity for a 523 aa protein. The sequence of this tpr-met cDNA was very similar to that previously reported in another human MNNG-transformed cell line (MNNG-HOS).


Archive | 1989

Oncogene Activation in Xeroderma Pigmentosum Skin Tumors

Leela Daya-Grosjean; Alice de Miranda; Horacio Suarez; Bertrand Chrétien; Marie-Françoise Avril; Alain Sarasin

There is growing evidence linking oncogene activation to the induction and/or maintenance of carcinogenesis (Knudson, 198 6). Data from animal models and cell lines have shown that oncogene activation can occur by four different mechanisms: retrovirus insertion near a proto-oncogene; chromosomal translocations; gene amplification or deletion; and point mutations. In about 2 0% of the most common forms of human tumors, mutations have been found most often in the proto-oncogenes of the ras family, assayed by the NIH 3T3 transformation system (Barbacid, 1987). Activation is acquired by single point mutations in two domains of the ras protein, p21, (mainly codons 12 and 61) greatly reducing its enzymatic activity in the modulation of signal transduction through transmembrane signalling systems (Barbacid, 1987).


Oncogene | 1997

High prevalence of activating ret proto-oncogene rearrangements, in thyroid tumors from patients who had received external radiation

Ali Bounacer; R Wicker; Bernard Caillou; Anne-Françoise Cailleux; Alain Sarasin; M. Schlumberger; Horacio Suarez


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1998

Iodide symporter gene expression in human thyroid tumors.

Franco Arturi; Diego Russo; Martin Schlumberger; Jean Antoine Du Villard; Bernard Caillou; Paolo Vigneri; R Wicker; Eusebio Chiefari; Horacio Suarez; Sebastiano Filetti


Oncogene | 1995

ACTIVATING MUTATIONS OF THE TSH RECEPTOR IN DIFFERENTIATED THYROID CARCINOMAS

Russo D; Franco Arturi; M. Schlumberger; Bernard Caillou; Roger Monier; Sebastiano Filetti; Horacio Suarez


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1996

Thyrotropin receptor gene alterations in thyroid hyperfunctioning adenomas

Diego Russo; Franco Arturi; Horacio Suarez; M. Schlumberger; J A Du Villard; U Crocetti; Sebastiano Filetti

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Alain Sarasin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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R Wicker

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ali Bounacer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Leela Daya-Grosjean

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sebastiano Filetti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fabián Pitoia

University of Buenos Aires

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