OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/64342
2026-05-26T03:23:05ZGenetic predisposition and functional analysis of pituitary adenomas
/library/oar/handle/123456789/31973
Title: Genetic predisposition and functional analysis of pituitary adenomas
Abstract: Pituitary adenomas are the most common type of intracranial tumours and albeit
being mostly benign, represent a significant burden both on patient quality of life and
the public health system. This thesis aimed at investigating various molecular aspects
of this disease, including genetic susceptibility, molecular mechanisms of
tumorigenesis, and the cellular physiology of octreotide treatment. A novel mis-sense
mutation, R9Q, was identified in a local acromegalic patient in the aryl hydrocarbon
receptor-interaction protein (AlP), a tumour suppressor gene commonly altered in
familial cases of pituitary adenomas. The R9Q AlP mutant was shown to lose the
ability to hinder proliferation successfully in primary pituitary cells and cell lines
when compared to the wild-type but the functional consequence of this mutation
remains speculative. The truncating R304X mutant lacked complete function
compared to wild-type. This study was the first to propose a functional mechanism
for the protective role of AlP. Wild-type AlP was demonstrated to reduce forskolin-induced
cAMP levels and downstream cAMP response element (CRE) - driven
transcription, resulting in a respective reduction in growth h011110ne secretion from
GH3 cells. This reduction occurred independently of phosphodiesterase activity.
Over-expression of wild-type AlP also reduced MYC oncogene expression,
proposing another possible mechanism for AlP's tumour suppressive ability.
Immunohistochemical analysis of Wnt proteins in 47 local tumours revealed that Wnt
pathway activation occurs independently of β-catenin transcription factor and that
MYC and Cyelin D 1 oncoproteins play a significant role in the initiation and
progression of the disease respectively. A novel gender difference in Cyelin D 1
expression was noted. MYC protein expression was not correlated with tumour
recurrence and evidence from octreotide treatment 111 patients and in GH3 cells,
together with significantly lower MYC expression in patients with hypopituitarism,
lends evidence for the honnonally controlled expression of the MYC gene. Surviving
oncoprotein expression was extremely low, both in local tumours and GH3 cells,
indicating at best a minor role in pituitary tumorigenesis
Description: PH.D.2012-01-01T00:00:00Z