Alternative splicing of the oncogene murine double minute 2 (MDM2) is induced in response to genotoxic stress. MDM2-ALT1, the major splice variant generated, is known to activate the p53 pathway and ...impede full-length MDM2's negative regulation of p53. Despite this perceptible tumor-suppressive role, MDM2-ALT1 is also associated with several cancers. Furthermore, expression of MDM2-ALT1 has been observed in aggressive metastatic disease in pediatric rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), irrespective of histological subtype. Therefore, we generated a transgenic MDM2-ALT1 mouse model that would allow us to investigate the effects of this splice variant on the progression of tumorigenesis. Here we show that when MDM2-ALT1 is ubiquitously expressed in p53 null mice it leads to increased incidence of spindle cell sarcomas, including RMS. Our data provide evidence that constitutive MDM2-ALT1 expression is itself an oncogenic lesion that aggravates the tumorigenesis induced by p53 loss. On the contrary, when MDM2-ALT1 is expressed solely in B-cells in the presence of homozygous wild-type p53 it leads to significantly increased lymphomagenesis (56%) when compared with control mice (27%). However, this phenotype is observable only at later stages in life (⩾18 months). Moreover, flow cytometric analyses for B-cell markers revealed an MDM2-ALT1-associated decrease in the B-cell population of the spleens of these animals. Our data suggest that the B-cell loss is p53 dependent and is a response mounted to persistent MDM2-ALT1 expression in a wild-type p53 background. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of an MDM2 splice variant as a critical modifier of both p53-dependent and -independent tumorigenesis, underscoring the complexity of MDM2 posttranscriptional regulation in cancer. Furthermore, MDM2-ALT1-expressing p53 null mice represent a novel mouse model of fusion-negative RMS.
Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the predominant subtype of thyroid cancer (THCA), and it can cluster in families with an autosomal dominant (AD) inheritance pattern. The aim of this study was to ...identify novel genes and mechanisms underlying PTC susceptibility.
Our previous investigation of 17 AD PTC families led us to conduct a deeper analysis on one family (Family Q) with whole-genome sequencing data from 3 PTC-affected individuals. In addition, 323 sporadic THCA cases from Avatar data and 12 familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) individuals with secondary THCA were screened for pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase regulatory (
) variants. CRISPR-Cas9 was used to create PDPR-deficient THCA (TPC1) and transformed normal thyroid cell lines (N-Thyori3-1) to study the metabolic consequences of PDPR loss.
We found truncating
splice donor variants (NM_017990.4:c.361 + 1G>C) in all affected PTC Family Q members, and another
splice donor variant (NM_017990.4:c.443 + 1G>C) in a sporadic PTC case. In addition, an ultra-rare missense variant was found in an FAP-PTC patient. The PDPR-deficient cells presented with elevated phosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase and altered glucose metabolism, implying that PDPR plays an essential part in regulating glucose metabolism in thyroid cells.
Our finding of novel truncating germline variants in
in Family Q and additional cohorts suggests a role for PDPR loss in PTC predisposition. Also, somatic and RNA sequencing from the thyroid carcinoma (Firehouse Legacy) data showed that
gene expression is much lower in THCA tumor tissue compared with matching normal tissue. Thus,
appears to have a loss of function effect on THCA tumorigenesis.
Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common type of thyroid cancer. The molecular characteristics of histologically normal appearing tissue adjacent to the tumor (NAT) from PTC patients are ...not well characterized. The aim of this study was to characterize the global gene expression profile of NAT and compare it with those of normal and tumor thyroid tissues. We performed total RNA sequencing with fresh frozen thyroid tissues from a cohort of three categories of samples including NAT, normal thyroid (N), and PTC tumor (T). Transcriptome analysis shows that NAT presents a unique gene expression profile, which was not associated with sex or the presence of lymphocytic thyroiditis. Among the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) of NAT vs N, 256 coding genes and 5 noncoding genes have been reported as cancer genes involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis, and/or tumorigenesis. Bioinformatics analysis with Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software revealed that "Cancer, Organismal Injury and Abnormalities, Cellular Response to Therapeutics, and Cellular Movement" were major dysregulated pathways in the NAT tissues. This study provides improved insight into the complexity of gene expression changes in the thyroid glands of patients with PTC.