scholarly journals Thyroid follicular cells secrete plasminogen activators and can form angiostatin from plasminogen

2002 ◽  
Vol 173 (3) ◽  
pp. 475-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
JD Ramsden ◽  
S Yarram ◽  
E Mathews ◽  
JC Watkinson ◽  
MC Eggo

Angiostatin, a 38 kDa fragment of plasminogen, potently inhibits the growth of blood vessels. Angiostatin is generated from plasminogen by urokinase-type (uPA) and tissue-type (tPA) plasminogen activators in the presence of free sulphydryl donors. Angiogenesis inhibitors may be important in regulating angiogenesis in developing goitre. We have examined angiostatin formation in human primary thyrocyte cultures and a rat thyrocyte cell line (FRTL-5). We found that human thyroid cells in culture secrete plasminogen activators (both tPA and uPA) as well as matrix metalloproteinase 2 into the medium. When human thyrocyte conditioned medium was incubated with plasminogen (10 microg/ml) and N-acetylcysteine (100 microM) for 24 h, a 38 kDa fragment of plasminogen, which is consistent with angiostatin, was generated. The appearance of the 38 kDa fragment was increased by agents that increase cAMP (forskolin and 8 BrcAMP). FRTL-5 cells, which do not secrete uPA or tPA, did not generate angiostatin. Thyroid cells produce several angiogenic growth factors, and human thyrocyte conditioned medium stimulated growth of endothelial cells. When the conditioned medium was incubated with plasminogen and N-acetylcysteine, this stimulatory effect was lost, consistent with the production of a growth inhibitory factor. We conclude that thyroid cells can produce angiostatin from plasminogen in vitro, and this may play a role in vivo in limiting goitre size.

1997 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-160
Author(s):  
Francesca Mattioli ◽  
Marianna Angiola ◽  
Laura Fazzuoli ◽  
Francesco Razzetta ◽  
Antonietta Martelli

Although primary cultures of human thyroid cells are used for endocrinological and toxicological studies, until now no attention has been paid toward verifying whether the hormonal conditions to which the gland was exposed in vivo prior to surgery could influence in vitro responses. Our findings suggest that the hormonal situation in vivo cannot be used as a predictive indicator of triiodothyronine and thyroxine release and/or S-phase frequency in vitro, either with or without the addition of bovine thyrotropin.


Sarcoma ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 197-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitsunori Kaya ◽  
Takuro Wada ◽  
Satoshi Nagoya ◽  
Satoshi Kawaguchi ◽  
Toshihiko Yamashita ◽  
...  

Angiogenesis inhibitors are a novel class of promising therapeutic agents for treating cancer. TNP-470, a systemic analogue of fumagillin, is an angiogenesis inhibitor capable of suppressing the tumorigenicity in several animal models even though the mechanisms of action have not been completely clarified. In the current study, we investigated the effects of TNP-470 on human fibrosarcoma cellsin vivoandin vitro. The administration of TNP-470 could suppress the tumorigenicity of HT1080 fibrosarcoma tumor. The conditioned medium from HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells treated with TNP-470 inhibited the proliferation and migration of human endothelial cell line, HUVEC and ECV304. The concentration of VEGF in the conditioned medium from HT1080 cells treated with TNP-470 was lower than that of the cells without TNP-470 treatment, indicating that TNP-470 downregulates the secretion of VEGF from HT1080 cells. These findings strongly suggest that the direct action of TNP-470 on sarcoma cells inhibits angiogenesis through the downregulation of VEGF secretion and this angiogenesis suppression resulted in the inhibition of tumorigenicity of HT1080 fibrosarcoma tumo.


2008 ◽  
Vol 198 (2) ◽  
pp. 301-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling Jin ◽  
Vanessa Chico-Galdo ◽  
Claude Massart ◽  
Christine Gervy ◽  
Viviane De Maertelaere ◽  
...  

Chronic administration of acrylamide has been shown to induce thyroid tumors in rat. In vitro acrylamide also causes DNA damage, as demonstrated by the comet assay, in various types of cells including human thyroid cells and lymphocytes, as well as rat thyroid cell lines. In this work, mice were administered acrylamide in their drinking water in doses comparable with those used in rats, i.e., around 3–4 mg/kg per day for mice treated 2, 6, and 8 months. Some of the mice were also treated with thyroxine (T4) to depress the activity of the thyroid. Others were treated with methimazole that inhibits thyroid hormone synthesis and consequently secretion and thus induces TSH secretion and thyroid activation. These moderate treatments were shown to have their known effect on the thyroid (e.g. thyroid hormone and thyrotropin serum levels, thyroid gland morphology…). Besides, T4 induced an important polydipsia and degenerative hypertrophy of adrenal medulla. Acrylamide exerted various discrete effects and at high doses caused peripheral neuropathy, as demonstrated by hind-leg paralysis. However, it did not induce thyroid tumorigenesis. These results show that the thyroid tumorigenic effects of acrylamide are not observed in another rodent species, the mouse, and suggest the necessity of an epidemiological study in human to conclude on a public health policy.


1988 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 341-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Kraiem ◽  
R. Alkobi ◽  
O. Sadeh

ABSTRACT Using an in-vitro system of cultured human thyroid cells and cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation as an index of cell stimulation, we compared TSH and thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulin (TSI) with regard to thyrocyte sensitization and desensitization. The smallest dose of TSH (0·05 mU/ml) capable of stimulating thyroid cells was the same as the minimum dose required to induce desensitization upon subsequent rechallenge with the hormone. In contrast, about 30-fold higher doses of TSI were needed to cause cell refractoriness compared with doses capable of eliciting stimulation. Moreover, significant stimulation of the thyroid with TSI was apparent much later than with TSH. A longer time-lapse was also necessary for TSI to induce densensitization. Likewise, thyrocytes recovered more slowly from TSI compared with TSH desensitization. Although at high doses TSI induced homologous desensitization, at lower doses the antibody, unlike TSH, potentiated the cAMP response to subsequent exposure to the antibody. The stimulatory doses of TSI were in the range usually encountered in active Graves' disease, which may explain why prolonged TSI in vivo sustains a hyperthyroid condition. In addition, we found that under conditions in which TSH leads to desensitization of the cAMP response, the thyroid cells maintained their responsiveness in terms of triiodothyronine secretory activity. Pre-exposure of human thyrocytes to TSI induced heterologous desensitization towards the TSH-stimulated cAMP response. Moreover, addition of the antibody to maximally desensitizing doses of TSH decreased cell sensitivity to the hormone even further. In sharp contrast, preincubation of cells with TSH, or TSH plus TSI, potentiated by four- and twofold respectively the cAMP response to subsequent challenge with TSI. Taken together, the data reveal marked differences between the action of TSH and TSI, and raise interesting questions concerning the mechanism whereby TSH potentiates the cAMP response to TSI. J. Endocr. (1988) 119, 341–349


1977 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. BIDEY ◽  
P. MARSDEN ◽  
J. ANDERSON ◽  
C. G. McKERRON ◽  
H. BERRY

SUMMARY Follicular cells isolated from normal human thyroid tissue have been cultured for up to 140 h with bovine thyrotrophin (TSH) or dibutyryl cyclic AMP (DBcAMP). Both compounds induced marked reorganization of the cells into three-dimensional follicular structures, whilst non-supplemented cells assumed a monolayer form. Cultures treated initially with TSH or DBcAMP showed a greater iodide uptake capacity, in comparison with unsupplemented cultures, in which iodide uptake was markedly diminished after 24 h. The release of tri-iodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) into the medium was determined by radioimmunoassay. Both TSH- and DBcAMP-treated cells showed a significant increase in iodothyronine output compared with unsupplemented control cells. In contrast to the 'classical' TSH-induced depression of the T4:T3 ratio in vivo, an increase in the ratio was observed for both TSH- and DBcAMP-supplemented cells in vitro. The ratio was also significantly greater after TSH than after DBcAMP, and possible implications of this finding are discussed.


1982 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
E L Khoury

Using indirect immunofluorescence (IFL) on viable human thyroid cultures, it has been shown that, although adult follicular cells do not express blood group ABH antigens in vivo, they invariably reexpress the corresponding antigens on the cell surface when cultured in monolayers, even for very short periods. The absence of blood group antigens on noncultured thyroid cells was confirmed by negative IFL on cell suspensions obtained after enzymatic digestion of the glands, whereas these antigens were readily demonstrable on cell suspensions obtained by trypsinization of established monolayers. The quantitative expression of ABH antigens on individual thyroid cells was variable and the cell-surface IFL pattern due to binding of blood group isoantibodies was different from that given by organ-specific thyroid autoantibodies on viable cultures. Reexpression of blood group antigens by cultured thyroid cells could not be related to the secretor status of the donors, the presence of a particular source of serum in the culture medium or cell division in vitro. After 2-3 wk in culture, thyroid cells became morphologically dedifferentiated and no longer displayed blood group antigens, though they still expressed cell-surface beta 2-microglobulin. Fibroblasts present in the primary thyroid cultures were invariably negative for ABH antigens. These results demonstrate that the surface antigenic repertoire of cultured human cells is not necessarily identical to that present on the same cells in vivo. Furthermore, the possibility that blood group natural isoantibodies bind to the cell surface must be taken into account in experiments in which cultured thyroid cells are exposed to human sera.


2003 ◽  
Vol 213 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret C. Eggo ◽  
Virginia M. Quiney ◽  
Spencer Campbell

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 818-818
Author(s):  
Yacine Boulaftali ◽  
Benoit Ho-Tin-Noe ◽  
Ana Pena ◽  
Stéphane Loyau ◽  
Laurence Venisse ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 818 Fibrinolysis, a physiological process leading to clot resorbtion, is strictly controlled by fibrin-localized plasminogen activators (tPA and uPA) and by inhibitors like plasminogen activator type-1 (PAI-1). The serpin PAI-1 is a plasmatic serine protease inhibitor, that is also stored in platelets α-granules. PAI-1 inhibits both the action of urokinase- and tissue-type plasminogen activators (uPA and tPA respectively), and is up to now considered as the principal inhibitor of fibrinolysis in vivo. Interestingly, platelets are also known to inhibit fibrinolysis by both PAI-1-dependent and PAI-1-independent mechanisms. The individual role of other serpins, specifically protease nexin-1 (PN-1) in the thrombolytic process has not been investigated so far. Indeed, we recently demonstrated that a significant amount of PN-1 is stored within the α-granules of platelets and plays an antithrombotic function in vivo. PN-1, also known as SERPINE2, deserves a special interest since it also significantly inhibits in vitro uPA, tPA and plasmin. In this study, we explored the effect of PN-1 on fibrinolysis in vitro and in vivo. We evidenced the antifibrinolytic activity of platelet PN-1 in vitro using a specific PN-1-blocking antibody and PN-1 deficient platelets and, in vivo in PN-1−/− mice. Our data directly indicate that platelet PN-1 inhibits both tPA and plasmin activities in fibrin zymography. Remarkably, whereas fibrin-bound tPA or plasmin activity is not affected by PAI-1, we showed that PN-1 inhibits both plasmin generation induced by tPA-bound to fibrin and fibrin-bound plasmin. Moreover, PN-1 blockade or PN-1 deficiency result in an increased lysis of fibrin clots generated from platelet-rich plasma indicating that PN-1 regulates endogenous tPA-mediated lysis. Rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) analysis shows that platelet PN-1 significantly decreases the rate of fibrinolysis ex vivo. Futhermore, blockade or deficiency of PN-1 provides direct evidence for an acceleration of the lysis-front velocity in platelet-rich clots. To challenge the role of PN-1 on fibrinolysis in vivo, we have developed an original murine model of thrombolysis. Using a dorsal skinfold chamber, thrombus formation induced by ferric chloride injury of venules and subsequent thrombolysis were visualized by microscopy on alive animals. This new approach allows a reproducible quantification of thrombus formation and of tPA- induced thrombus lysis. We observed that thrombi are more readily lysed in PN-1-deficient mice than in wild-type mice. Moreover, in PN-1 deficient mice, the rate and the extent of reperfusion were both increased (Figure A and B). These data demonstrate that platelet PN-1 is a new negative regulator of thrombolysis activity of plasmin, both in solution and within the clot. For the first time, this study shows that PN-1 protects towards thrombolysis and therefore could give rise to new approaches for therapeutic application. Indeed, PN-1 might be a promising target for optimizing thrombolytic therapy by tPA. Figure : Effect of PN-1 on thrombolysis. (A) Representative intravital images of vessels reperfusion after tPA treatment in dorsal skinfold chamber. (B) Quantification of the incidence of reperfused vessels within 1 hour post tPA treatment Figure :. Effect of PN-1 on thrombolysis. (A) Representative intravital images of vessels reperfusion after tPA treatment in dorsal skinfold chamber. (B) Quantification of the incidence of reperfused vessels within 1 hour post tPA treatment Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1989 ◽  
Vol 62 (03) ◽  
pp. 909-916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward T A Fry ◽  
David L Mack ◽  
Burton E Sobel

SummaryEnhancement of thrombolysis with combinations of tissue-type and single chain urokinase plasminogen activators (t-PA and scu-PA) has been demonstrated in vivo but has not been seen consistently in vitro. This study was designed to characterize interactions between t-PA and scu-PA with respect to rate of and extent of thrombolysis in vitro and to delineate mechanisms responsible. Combinations of t-PA and scu-PA at selected concentrations synergistically enhanced thrombolysis in vitro compared with thrombolysis induced by either activator alone. Enhanced thrombolysis did not occur at the expense of fibrin specificity since the extent of fibrinogenolysis and consumption of α2-antiplasmin were significantly less with synergistic combinations of t-PA and scu-PA compared with equi-effective concentrations of either activator alone. Attenuation of complex formation of t-PA and two chain u-PA (tcu-PA), formed from scu-PA, with plasma proteins did not appear to contribute to enhancement of thrombolysis as assessed by fibrin autography. Binding of 125I-t-PA to thrombi was increased by 27% at 1 hr and by 21% at 2 hr in the presence of scu-PA (p <0,001 for both). Conversion of scu-PA to tcu-PA was enhanced when thrombi were exposed to scu-PA in the presence of t-PA. Results of this study indicate that t-PA and scu-PA at selected concentrations enhance thrombolysis in vitro synergistically without compromising fibrin specificity. Enhanced binding of t-PA to thrombi in the presence of scu-PA and enhanced conversion of scu-PA to tcu-PA appear to contribute to synergy between t-PA and scu-PA for thrombolysis.


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