Abstract

In addition to the well-known role of the thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) in growth, development and metabolism, there is increasing evidence that they have profound effects on cell proliferation and malignant transformation. TRs repress transcriptional induction of cyclin D1 by the ras oncogene and block transformation and tumor formation by Ras-transformed fibroblasts in nude mice. Mutant receptors that do not bind coactivators are able to display these actions, whereas receptors defective in corepressors binding are unable to antagonize the responses to the ras oncogene. Furthermore, expression of TRĪ²1 in hepatocarcinoma and breast cancer cells abolishes anchorage-independent growth and migration, blocks responses to growth factors and represses expression of prometastatic genes, reducing tumor growth and strongly inhibiting invasiveness, extravasation and metastasis formation in euthyroid mice. By contrast, when cells are inoculated into hypothyroid host, tumor growth is retarded, but tumors are more invasive and metastatic growth is enhanced. Increased aggressiveness and tumor growth retardation was also observed with parental cells that do not express TRs, showing that changes secondary to hypothyroidism can modulate tumor progression and metastatic growth independently of the presence of TRs on the tumor cells. Finally, increased malignancy of skin tumors is found in mice lacking TRs, further demonstrating the role of these receptors as inhibitors of tumor progression and suggesting that they represent a potential therapeutic target in cancer.

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