Sprouty1 haploinsufficiency accelerates pheochromocytoma development in Pten+/− mice

2016 
Pheochromocytomas (PCCs) are rare catecholamine-secreting tumors arising from the chromaffin cells in the adrenal medulla. Closely related paragangliomas share developmental origin but arise extra-adrenally, in the paraganglia that belongs to the sympathetic and parasympathetic ganglia. Most PCCs are sporadic but around 25%-30% of them are associated with familial syndromes caused by germline mutations of at least ten genes (Gimenez-Roqueplo et al. 2012). The low incidence of pheochromocytomas poses difficulties to the development of diagnostic or prognostic markers as well as effective therapies and thus the development of novel animal and cellular models for the study of the disease is needed. Sprouty family of genes is composed of four members of feedback inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling, that specifically target the MAPK pathway. As such, they have been proposed as tumor suppressors in several cancerous pathologies such as tumors of the prostate, thyroid or liver (Masoumi-Moghaddam et al. 2014). Here we present a novel mouse model of pheochromocytoma consisting of double heterozygous mice for Pten and Spry1. These animals develop pheochromocytomas that appear at earlier onset and grow at higher rate than those from Pten+/- mice
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    10
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []