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1.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 5647, 2018 04 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29618800

ABSTRACT

The foregut endoderm gives rise to several organs including liver, pancreas, lung and thyroid with important roles in human physiology. Understanding which genes and signalling pathways regulate their development is crucial for understanding developmental disorders as well as diseases in adulthood. We exploited unique advantages of the zebrafish model to develop a rapid and scalable CRISPR/Cas-based mutagenesis strategy aiming at the identification of genes involved in morphogenesis and function of the thyroid. Core elements of the mutagenesis assay comprise bi-allelic gene invalidation in somatic mutants, a non-invasive monitoring of thyroid development in live transgenic fish, complementary analyses of thyroid function in fixed specimens and quantitative analyses of mutagenesis efficiency by Illumina sequencing of individual fish. We successfully validated our mutagenesis-phenotyping strategy in experiments targeting genes with known functions in early thyroid morphogenesis (pax2a, nkx2.4b) and thyroid functional differentiation (duox, duoxa, tshr). We also demonstrate that duox and duoxa crispants phenocopy thyroid phenotypes previously observed in human patients with bi-allelic DUOX2 and DUOXA2 mutations. The proposed combination of efficient mutagenesis protocols, rapid non-invasive phenotyping and sensitive genotyping holds great potential to systematically characterize the function of larger candidate gene panels during thyroid development and is applicable to other organs and tissues.


Subject(s)
CRISPR-Cas Systems , Morphogenesis , Mutation , Receptors, Thyrotropin/genetics , Thyroid Diseases/pathology , Thyroid Gland/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified/embryology , Animals, Genetically Modified/genetics , Animals, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Phenotype , Receptors, Thyrotropin/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, Thyrotropin/metabolism , Thyroid Diseases/genetics , Thyroid Diseases/metabolism , Thyroid Gland/pathology , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/physiology , Zebrafish Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
2.
Oncogene ; 31(41): 4490-8, 2012 Oct 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22266856

ABSTRACT

Differentiation is central to development, while dedifferentiation is central to cancer progression. Hence, a quantitative assessment of differentiation would be most useful. We propose an unbiased method to derive organ-specific differentiation indices from gene expression data and demonstrate its usefulness in thyroid cancer diagnosis. We derived a list of thyroid-specific genes by selecting automatically those genes that are expressed at higher level in the thyroid than in any other organ in a normal tissue's genome-wide gene expression compendium. The thyroid index of a tissue was defined as the median expression of these thyroid-specific genes in that tissue. As expected, the thyroid index was inversely correlated with meta-PCNA, a proliferation metagene, across a wide range of thyroid tumors. By contrast, the two indices were positively correlated in a time course of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) activation of primary thyrocytes. Thus, the thyroid index captures biological information not integrated by proliferation rates. The differential diagnostic of follicular thyroid adenomas and follicular thyroid carcinoma is a notorious challenge for pathologists. The thyroid index discriminated them as accurately as did machine-learning classifiers trained on the genome-wide cancer data. Hence, although it was established exclusively from normal tissue data, the thyroid index integrates the relevant diagnostic information contained in tumoral transcriptomes. Similar results were obtained for the classification of the follicular vs classical variants of papillary thyroid cancers, that is, tumors dedifferentiating along a different route. The automated procedures demonstrated in the thyroid are applicable to other organs.


Subject(s)
Adenoma/diagnosis , Carcinoma/diagnosis , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , Thyroid Neoplasms/diagnosis , Adenoma/genetics , Adenoma/pathology , Algorithms , Area Under Curve , Carcinoma/genetics , Carcinoma/pathology , Carcinoma, Papillary , Cell Dedifferentiation , Cell Proliferation , Decision Trees , Diagnosis, Differential , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Organ Specificity , Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen/genetics , Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen/metabolism , ROC Curve , Support Vector Machine , Thyroid Cancer, Papillary , Thyroid Carcinoma, Anaplastic , Thyroid Neoplasms/genetics , Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology , Thyrotropin/physiology , Transcriptome
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