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Effect of the micronutrient iodine in thyroid carcinoma angiogenesis

期刊

AGING-US
卷 8, 期 12, 页码 3180-3184

出版社

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.101143

关键词

iodine; thyroid cancer; BRAFV600E; pre-clinical model; angiogenesis; tumor growth; VEGF; HIF-1; TGFB

资金

  1. National Cancer Institute/National Institutes of Health [1R21CA165039-01A1, 1R01CA181183-01A1]
  2. American Thyroid Association (ATA)
  3. ThyCa:Thyroid Cancer Survivors Association Inc. for Thyroid Cancer Research
  4. Guido Berlucchi Young Investigator research award (Brescia, Italy)
  5. BIDMC/CAO Grant (Boston, MA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Iodide is a micronutrient essential for thyroid hormone production. The uptake and metabolism of iodide by thyrocytes is crucial to proper thyroid function. Iodide ions are drawn into the thyroid follicular cell via the sodium-iodide symporter (NIS) in the cell membrane and become integrated into tyrosyl residues to ultimately form thyroid hormones. We sought to learn how an abnormal concentration of iodide within thyrocyte can have significant effects on the thyroid, specifically the surrounding vascular network. Insufficient levels of iodide can lead to increased expression or activity of several pathways, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). The VEGF protein fuel vessel growth (angiogenesis) and therefore enhances the nutrients available to surrounding cells. Alternatively, normal/surplus iodide levels can have inhibitory effects on angiogenesis. Varying levels of iodide in the thyroid can influence thyroid carcinoma cell proliferation and angiogenesis via regulation of the hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) and VEGF-dependent pathway. We have reviewed a number of studies to investigate how the effect of iodide on angiogenic and oxidative stress regulation can affect the viability of thyroid carcinoma cells. The various studies outlined give key insights to the role of iodide in thyroid follicles function and vascular growth, generally highlighting that insufficient levels of iodide stimulate pathways resulting in vascular growth, and viceversa normal/surplus iodide levels inhibit such pathways. Intriguingly, TSH and iodine levels differentially regulate the expression levels of angiogenic factors. All cells, including carcinoma cells, increase uptake of blood nutrients, meaning the vascular profile is influential to tumor growth and progression. Importantly, variation in the iodine concentrations also influence BRAF(V600E)-mediated oncogenic activity and might deregulate tumor proliferation. Although the mechanisms are not well eluted, iodine concentrations and metabolism might have a crucial influence on thyroid carcinoma cell viability via regulation of different molecular pathways, including angiogenesis regulatory autocrine and microenvironment-mediated signals.

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