| Literature DB >> 36010855 |
Masaaki Yamamoto1, Yutaka Takahashi1,2.
Abstract
Acromegaly is caused by excessive secretion of GH and IGF-I mostly from somatotroph tumors. Various genetic and epigenetic factors are involved in the pathogenesis of somatotroph tumors. While somatic mutations of GNAS are the most prevalent cause of somatotroph tumors, germline mutations in various genes (AIP, PRKAR1A, GPR101, GNAS, MEN1, CDKN1B, SDHx, MAX) are also known as the cause of somatotroph tumors. Moreover, recent findings based on multiple perspectives of the pangenomic approach including genome, transcriptome, and methylome analyses, histological characterization, genomic instability, and possible involvement of miRNAs have gradually unveiled the whole landscape of the underlying mechanisms of somatotroph tumors. In this review, we will focus on the recent advances in genetic and epigenetic pathogenesis of somatotroph tumors.Entities:
Keywords: FIPA; GNAS; acromegaly; miRNA; somatotroph tumors
Year: 2022 PMID: 36010855 PMCID: PMC9405703 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14163861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
The list of disease-related genes that are involved in the pathogenesis of somatotroph tumors. ND: not determined.
| Germline or Mosaic Mutations | Reported Incidence of Mutations | Concomitant Development of the Tumors | The Mechanisms of Tumorigenesis by the Gene Mutation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/30,000~1/40,000 | parathyroid adenoma, pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor | Influence on cell proliferation, cell signaling, transcriptional regulation, and genome stability | |
| up to 3% of cases with negative | corticotroph adenoma, parathyroid adenoma | Dysregulation of the cell cycle. | |
| 750 cases | skin lesions, cutaneous and heart myxomas, PPNAD, large cell calcifying Sertoli cell tumor/ calcification of testis, thyroid carcinoma or multiple hypoechoic nodules, breast ductal adenoma psammomatous melanotic schwannomas, blue nevus, osteochondromyxoma | Inactivating mutations of PRKAR1A lead to uncontrolled activation of cAMP-dependent kinase activity in affected tissues | |
| 1/100,000~1/1,000,000 live births | fibrous dysplasia, precocious puberty, café-au-lait skin lesions | A constitutively activated cAMP pathway leading to persistent GH hypersecretion and cell proliferation. | |
| 10% of FIPA | none | Elevated concentrations of cAMP | |
| 7.8–10% of gigantism patients | none | Activation of an orphan G protein-coupled receptor and increased cAMP levels, which is a key factor in GH secretion and cell proliferation in response to GHRH | |
| very rare | pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma (PPGL) | The accumulation of onco-metabolites that inhibit degradation of hypoxia transcription factor (HIFα) | |
| very rare | pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma (PPGL), neuroendocrine cells, renal tumors, small cell lung cancer | To interact with other parts of the MAX-MLX network, which is responsible for the integration of cellular signals and modulates the expression of another gene | |
| 1:2500–1:3500 live births. | optic pathway gliomas, cutaneous neurofibromas, cafe-au-lait skin lesions, intertriginous freckling, Lisch nodules, brain tumors | Involved in cell growth and proliferation, by inhibiting RAS activity and regulation of cAMP levels | |
| very rare | multiple hamartomas in brain, lungs, heart, skin, and kidney | ND |
The list of miRNAs and lncRNAs and their target mRNAs involved in the pathogenesis and characteristics of somatotroph tumors.
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| miR-15a, miR-16-1 | down regulated | |
| miR-34b, miR-326, miR-432, miR-548c-3p, miR-570, miR-603 | down regulated | |
| miR-128 | down regulated |
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| miR-23b, | down regulated |
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| miR-130b | down regulated |
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| miR-185 | up/down regulated |
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| miR-338-3p, miR-423-5p | up regulated |
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| miR-107 | up regulated |
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| miR-26b | up regulated |
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| miR-184 | up regulated |
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| miR-21-5p | up regulated | |
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| H19 | down regulated |
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| up regulated | not determined | |
| MEG3 | up regulated | not determined |