Resumo (PT):
Background: Thyroid carcinomas show a high prevalence of mutations in the oncogene BRAF which are
inversely associated with RAS or RET/PTC oncogenic activation. The possibility of using inhibitors on the
BRAF pathway as became an interesting therapeutic approach. In thyroid cancer cells the target molecules,
implicated on the cellular effects, mediated by inhibition of BRAF are not well established. In order to fill
this lack of knowledge we studied the proliferation and survival pathways and associated molecules
induced by BRAF inhibition in thyroid carcinoma cell lines harbouring distinct genetic backgrounds.
Methods: Suppression of BRAF pathway in thyroid cancer cell lines (8505C, TPC1 and C643) was
achieved using RNA interference (RNAi) for BRAF and the kinase inhibitor, sorafenib. Proliferation
analysis was performed by BrdU incorporation and apoptosis was accessed by TUNEL assay. Levels of
protein expression were analysed by western-blot.
Results: Both BRAF RNAi and sorafenib inhibited proliferation in all the cell lines independently of the
genetic background, mostly in cells with BRAFV600E mutation. In BRAFV600E mutated cells inhibition of BRAF
pathway lead to a decrease in ERK1/2 phosphorylation and cyclin D1 levels and an increase in p27Kip1.
Specific inhibition of BRAF by RNAi in cells with BRAFV600E mutation had no effect on apoptosis. In the
case of sorafenib treatment, cells harbouring BRAFV600E mutation showed increase levels of apoptosis due
to a balance of the anti-apoptotic proteins Mcl-1 and Bcl-2.
Conclusion: Our results in thyroid cancer cells, namely those harbouring BRAFV600Emutation showed
that BRAF signalling pathway provides important proliferation signals. We have shown that in thyroid
cancer cells sorafenib induces apoptosis by affecting Mcl-1 and Bcl-2 in BRAFV600E mutated cells which was
independent of BRAF. These results suggest that sorafenib may prove useful in the treatment of thyroid
carcinomas, particularly those refractory to conventional treatment and harbouring BRAF mutations.
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Abstract (EN):
Background: Thyroid carcinomas show a high prevalence of mutations in the oncogene BRAF which are
inversely associated with RAS or RET/PTC oncogenic activation. The possibility of using inhibitors on the
BRAF pathway as became an interesting therapeutic approach. In thyroid cancer cells the target molecules,
implicated on the cellular effects, mediated by inhibition of BRAF are not well established. In order to fill
this lack of knowledge we studied the proliferation and survival pathways and associated molecules
induced by BRAF inhibition in thyroid carcinoma cell lines harbouring distinct genetic backgrounds.
Methods: Suppression of BRAF pathway in thyroid cancer cell lines (8505C, TPC1 and C643) was
achieved using RNA interference (RNAi) for BRAF and the kinase inhibitor, sorafenib. Proliferation
analysis was performed by BrdU incorporation and apoptosis was accessed by TUNEL assay. Levels of
protein expression were analysed by western-blot.
Results: Both BRAF RNAi and sorafenib inhibited proliferation in all the cell lines independently of the
genetic background, mostly in cells with BRAFV600E mutation. In BRAFV600E mutated cells inhibition of BRAF
pathway lead to a decrease in ERK1/2 phosphorylation and cyclin D1 levels and an increase in p27Kip1.
Specific inhibition of BRAF by RNAi in cells with BRAFV600E mutation had no effect on apoptosis. In the
case of sorafenib treatment, cells harbouring BRAFV600E mutation showed increase levels of apoptosis due
to a balance of the anti-apoptotic proteins Mcl-1 and Bcl-2.
Conclusion: Our results in thyroid cancer cells, namely those harbouring BRAFV600Emutation showed
that BRAF signalling pathway provides important proliferation signals. We have shown that in thyroid
cancer cells sorafenib induces apoptosis by affecting Mcl-1 and Bcl-2 in BRAFV600E mutated cells which was
independent of BRAF. These results suggest that sorafenib may prove useful in the treatment of thyroid
carcinomas, particularly those refractory to conventional treatment and harbouring BRAF mutations.
<br>
<br>
<a target="_blank" href="http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=40&hid=15&sid=86acae9e-fb89-49c5-a9c2-4e0d70164b6e%40sessionmgr12&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=a9h&AN=47282622 "> Texto integral </a>
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Idioma:
Inglês
Tipo (Avaliação Docente):
Científica