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Antitumor effects of the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib in medullary and anaplastic thyroid carcinoma cells in vitro.

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TLDR
These data provide both insights into the molecular mechanisms of antitumor activity of proteasome inhibitors and the rationale for future clinical trials of bortezomib, alone or in combination with conventional chemotherapy, to improve patient outcome in medullary and anaplastic thyroid carcinomas.
Abstract
Context: The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is a major pathway for degradation of intracellular proteins. Proteasome inhibitors constitute a novel class of antitumor agents with preclinical and clinical evidence of activity against hematological malignancies and solid tumors. The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (PS-341, Velcade) has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of multiple myeloma and is being studied intensely in several other malignancies. Its mechanism of action is complex but appears to include the inhibition of inhibitory-B degradation, which leads to inactivation of the transcriptional factor nuclear factor-B (NF-B). NF-B has been implicated in the pathophysiology of the most aggressive forms of thyroid carcinoma, i.e. medullary and anaplastic. Objective and Methods: We evaluated the effect of bortezomib on a panel of thyroid carcinoma cell lines, originating from papillary, follicular, anaplastic, and medullary carcinomas. Results: Bortezomib induced apoptosis in medullary and anaplastic cell lines with IC50 values well within the range of clinically achievable concentrations and much lower than respective IC50 values for other solid malignancies. Bortezomib inhibited NF-B activity; increased p53, p21, and jun expression; and induced caspase-dependent apoptosis. Sensitivity of thyroid carcinoma cells to bortezomib was partially decreased by overexpression of Bcl-2 or treatment with IGF-I, whereas the combination of bortezomib with chemotherapy (doxorubicin) was synergistic. Conclusions: These data provide both insights into the molecular mechanisms of antitumor activity of proteasome inhibitors and the rationale for future clinical trials of bortezomib, alone or in combination with conventional chemotherapy, to improve patient outcome inmedullaryandanaplasticthyroidcarcinomas.(JClinEndocrinol Metab 91: 4013–4021, 2006)

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Molecular pathogenesis and mechanisms of thyroid cancer

TL;DR: This work focuses on thyroid cancer, where the elucidation of the fundamental role of several major signalling pathways and related molecular derangements and central to these mechanisms are mutation, gene copy-number gain and aberrant gene methylation.
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Anaplastic thyroid cancer: molecular pathogenesis and emerging therapies

TL;DR: With the recent increased knowledge of the many critical genes and proteins affected in ATC, and the extensive array of targeted therapies being developed for cancer patients, there are new opportunities to design clinical trials based upon tumor molecular profiling and preclinical studies of potentially synergistic combinatorial novel therapies.
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Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: from clinicopathology to genetics and advanced therapies

TL;DR: The most recent literature regarding conventional, newly available and future therapies for ATC is discussed, and insight into the molecular biology of this disease is provided.
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New therapeutic approaches to treat medullary thyroid carcinoma.

TL;DR: Patients with distant metastases, in particular, might benefit from several novel compounds directed against angiogenesis and molecular targets in tumor cells, such as products of the proto-oncogene RET and mutants of it, and other signaling components.
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Mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced behavioral toxicities

TL;DR: It is argued that, based on the available evidence, neuroinflammation is unlikely the only mechanism involved in the pathogenesis of chemotherapy-induced behavioral toxicities, and two other putative candidate mechanisms are evaluated.
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Regulation of p53 stability by Mdm2

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Journal ArticleDOI

Noxa, a BH3-Only Member of the Bcl-2 Family and Candidate Mediator of p53-Induced Apoptosis

TL;DR: A previously unidentified pro-apoptotic gene, Noxa, which encodes a Bcl-2 homology 3 (BH3)-only member of the BCl-2 family of proteins may represent a mediator of p53-dependent apoptosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The proteasome: a suitable antineoplastic target

Julian Adams
TL;DR: A proteasome inhibitor — bortezomib — has been developed that has shown efficacy as an anticancer agent in the clinic and how can targeting such a universal, broadly active cellular component provide the selectivity and specificity that are required for cancer therapeutics?
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