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27 November 1997, Volume 15, Number 22, Pages 2687-2698
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Article
Upregulation of the angiogenic factors PlGF, VEGF and their receptors (Flt-1, Flk-1/KDR) by TSH in cultured thyrocytes and in the thyroid gland of thiouracil-fed rats suggest a TSH-dependent paracrine mechanism for goiter hypervascularization
Giuseppe Viglietto1, Annunciata Romano1, Giovanni Manzo1, Gennaro Chiappetta1, Iole Paoletti1, Daniela Califano1, Maria Giulia Galati1, Valeria Mauriello1, Paola Bruni1, Carmine T Lago2, Alfredo Fusco3 and M Graziella Persico2,a

1Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori `Fondazione Senatore Pascale', Via M Semmola, 80131 Naples, Italy

2International Institute of Genetics and Biophysics, CNR, Via G Marconi, 12, 80125 Naples, Italy

3Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica, Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia di Catanzaro, Università degli Studi di Reggio Calabria, Italy

aAuthor for correspondence

Abstract

Placenta growth factor (PlGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) represent two closely related angiogenic growth factors active as homodimers or heterodimers. Since goiters of the thyroid gland are extremely hypervascular, we investigated the expression of PlGF, VEGF and their receptors, Flt-1 and Flk-1/KDR, in a small panel of human goiters from patients with Graves's disease, in an animal model of thyroid goitrogenesis and in in vitro cultured thyroid cells. Here we report that the mRNA expression of PlGF, VEGF and their receptors is markedly enhanced in biopsies of goiters resected from Graves's patients. In vivo studies demonstrated that in the thyroid gland of thiouracil-fed rats, increased mRNA and protein expression of PlGF, VEGF, Flt-1 and Flk-1/KDR occurred subsequent to the rise in the serum thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels and in parallel with thyroid capillary proliferation. In vitro studies confirmed the existence of such TSH-dependent paracrine communication between thyroid epithelial cells and endothelium since the conditioned medium collected from TSH-stimulated thyrocytes acquired mitogenic activity for human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cells. Altogether, these data suggest that PlGF and VEGF, released by thyrocytes in response to the chronic activation of the TSH receptor pathway, may act through a paracrine mechanism on thyroid endothelium.

Keywords

PlGF; VEGF; TSH; thyroid goiter; hypervascularization

Received 2 May 1999; revised 25 July 1999; accepted 25 July 1999
27 November 1997, Volume 15, Number 22, Pages 2687-2698
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