| Literature DB >> 34440460 |
Francesca Marini1,2, Francesca Giusti1, Teresa Iantomasi1, Maria Luisa Brandi2.
Abstract
Endocrine tumors are neoplasms originating from specialized hormone-secreting cells. They can develop as sporadic tumors, caused by somatic mutations, or in the context of familial Mendelian inherited diseases. Congenital forms, manifesting as syndromic or non-syndromic diseases, are caused by germinal heterozygote autosomal dominant mutations in oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. The genetic defect leads to a loss of cell growth control in target endocrine tissues and to tumor development. In addition to the classical cancer manifestations, some affected patients can manifest alterations of bone and mineral metabolism, presenting both as pathognomonic and/or non-specific skeletal clinical features, which can be either secondary complications of endocrine functioning primary tumors and/or a direct consequence of the gene mutation. Here, we specifically review the current knowledge on possible direct roles of the genes that cause inherited endocrine tumors in the regulation of bone modeling and remodeling by exploring functional in vitro and in vivo studies highlighting how some of these genes participate in the regulation of molecular pathways involved in bone and mineral metabolism homeostasis, and by describing the potential direct effects of gene mutations on the development of skeletal and mineral metabolism clinical features in patients.Entities:
Keywords: bone modeling; bone remodeling; bone tissue; inherited endocrine tumors; oncogenes; skeletal clinical features; tumor suppressor genes
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34440460 PMCID: PMC8393565 DOI: 10.3390/genes12081286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Causative genes, main endocrine and non-endocrine clinical manifestations and skeletal features in inherited endocrine tumors.
| Disease Name [OMIM Number] | Causative Gene (Chromosomal Location) | Gene Function | Type of Germline Mutations | Main Endocrine and Non-Endocrine Clinical Manifestations | Pathognomonic Skeletal Features | Non-Pathognomonic Bone and Mineral Metabolism Alterations, Reported in Affected Patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Familial isolated primary hyperparathyroidism (FIHP) [145000] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Parathyroid hyperplasia, adenomas and carcinoma. Primary hyperparathyroidism only. | Not reported | Hyperparathyroidism-derived bone mass loss | |
| Autosomal dominant familial isolated hyperparathyroidism type 4 (HRPT4) [617343] | Oncogene | Heterozygote activating mutations of the | Parathyroid hyperplasia, adenomas and rare cases of carcinoma. Primary hyperparathyroidism only. | Not reported | Hyperparathyroidism-derived bone mass loss (osteopenia) and/or kidney stones. | |
| Familial isolated pituitary adenoma 1, multiple types (FIPA) [102200] | TSG | Up to 20% of FIPA patients have germline heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Mostly pituitary GH-secreting adenomas, but also pituitary ACTH-secreting, PRL-secreting and TSH-secreting adenomas. | GH-secreting tumors cause acromegaly (coarse facial features, protruding jaw and enlarged extremities) and gigantism. | Not reported | |
| X-linked acrogigantism (XLAG) [300942] | Oncogene | GH-secreting pituitary hyperplasia/adenoma. | Skeletal overgrowth caused by excessive GH | Not reported | ||
| Familial adenomatous polyposis type 1 (FAP1) [175100] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Hundreds to thousands adenomatous polyps (adenomas) of the colon and rectum. Predisposing factor to carcinoma of the colon and the rectum. | Osteomas (benign, slow growing bony tumors involving the base of the skull and paranasal sinuses and originating in bones characterized by intramembranous ossification) in the Gardner syndrome variant. | Not reported | |
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| Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) [131100] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Parathyroid four-gland hyperplasia/adenoma, neuroendocrine tumors of the gastro-entero-pancreatic tract, pituitary adenoma (mostly PRL-secreting tumors), bronchial and thymic carcinoids, hyperplasia/adenoma of the adrenal glands. | Not reported | Hyperparathyroidism-derived early onset bone mass loss. Significantly higher prevalence of severe osteopenia and osteoporosis, mainly in women by the age of 35, with respect to control population of the same age [ | |
| Multiple Endocrine Neoplasias type 2A (MEN2A) [171400] and type 2B (MEN2B) [162300] | Oncogene | Heterozygote gain-of-function missense mutations of the | Medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma and, only in the MEN2A form, parathyroid hyperplasia/adenoma. | Marfanoid habitus (slender, tall and thin body with long limbs), high-arched palate, long and thin face with prognathism, pectus excavatum, equino-varus foot, femoral epiphysiolysis, kyphosis, scoliosis in MEN2B. | Hyperparathyroidism-derived bone mass reduction in MEN2A. | |
| Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 4 (MEN4) [610755] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Parathyroid multiglandular hyperplasia/adenoma, pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, pituitary adenomas. | Not reported | Possible hyperparathyroidism-derived bone mass reduction after 45 years of age. | |
| Hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumors syndrome (HPT-JT) [145001] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Parathyroid hyperplasia, adenomas and/or carcinoma, ossifying fibroma of the maxilla and/or mandible, renal tumors (cysts, hamartomas and/or renal cell cancer) and uterine fibromas. | Ossifying fibroma of the maxilla and/or mandible. | Parathyroid carcinoma-derived severe hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcemia lead to a high bone resorption, osteopenia/osteoporosis, bone pain, increased risk of fragility fractures, hypercalciuria and nephrolithiasis, and they may give rise to multiple brown tumors (osteitis fibrosa cystica). | |
| Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome (VHL) [193300] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Angiomas of the retina, hemangioblastoma of the cerebellum and hemangioma of the spinal cord. Renal cell carcinoma, pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma and pancreatic tumors (usually non-functioning) are reported in some patients. | Not reported | Not reported | |
| Carney complex type 1 (CNC1) [160980] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Multiple cardiac, endocrine, cutaneous and neural myxomatous tumors. A variety of pigmented lesions of the skin and mucosae (multiple lentigines, ephelides, nevi) in typical sites (conjunctiva, lips, genital mucosa). Large cell calcifying Sertoli cell tumor, psammomatous melanotic schwannomas. | Myxoid bone tumors (osteochondromyxomas), prevalently located in the nasal region and in the diaphysis of radius and tibia. | Not reported | |
| Cowden/PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS) [158350] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating de novo mutations of the | Multiple hamartomas. Macrocephaly, adult Lhermitte-Duclos disease, facial trichilemmomas, acral keratoses, papillomatous papules. Increased risk of developing carcinomas of the breast, the thyroid (follicular or papillary tumors) and the endometrium. | Increased cranial size (macrocephaly), with an occipital frontal circumference ≥ 97th percentile. | Osteosarcoma is an extremely rare presentation of PHTS (only one case has been reported in the English-written literature) [ | |
| Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) [162200] | TSG | Heterozygote inactivating mutations of the | Multiple benign tumors of the nerves (neurofibromas), peripheral nerve sheath tumors, pigmented skin lesions (Cafe-au-lait spots, ephelides), Lisch nodules in the eye, optic pathway gliomas, fibromatous tumors of the skin. | Characteristic bone deformities have been reported in about 35% of patients [ | Higher incidence of osteopenia/osteoporosis (over 50% of patients showed a significant overall reduction in BMD starting from childhood), compared to the general population of the same age [ | |
| Tuberous sclerosis type 1 (TSC1) [191100] and type 2 (TSC2) [613254] | TSG | Germline mutations account for 50–86% of all cases of tuberous sclerosis complex. | Multiple hamartomas in multi organ systems (brain, kidneys, skin, heart and lungs). Central nervous system manifestations (epilepsy, seizures, learning difficulties, autism). Renal cysts, angiomyolipomas and renal cell carcinoma. Skin lesions (hypomelanotic macules, facial angiofibromas, confetti lesions, patches of connective tissue nevi). Pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis. | Sclerotic bone lesions (in about 40–60% of cases), including hyperostosis of the inner table of the calvaria and cyst-like osseous lesions (mainly at metacarpal and metatarsal bones, spine, pelvis and calvaria) [ | Osteoblastic changes, excess of periosteal new bone formation. | |
Footnotes: TSG = tumor suppressor gene; GH = growth hormone; ACTH = adrenocorticotropic hormone; PRL = prolactin; TSH = thyroid stimulating hormone.