4.7 Review

MENIN-mediated regulation of gastrin gene expression and its role in gastrinoma development

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 37, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202201809RR

Keywords

Brunner's glands; GEP-NENs; GFAP; multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1); neuroendocrine

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Mutations in the MEN1 gene lead to the development of gastrinomas, which overproduce the hormone gastrin. Gastrin is a peptide hormone primarily synthesized in the gastric antrum that stimulates acid secretion. The goal of current studies is to understand how MEN1 mutations generate a mutant MENIN protein that abrogates its tumor suppressor function.
The Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia I (MEN1) locus encodes the protein MENIN, which functions as a tumor suppressor protein in neuroendocrine tissues. Gastrinomas are neuroendocrine neoplasms that overproduce the hormone gastrin and can arise sporadically or as part of the MEN1 syndrome, in which mutations in the MEN1 gene lead to loss or inactivation of MENIN protein. Gastrin is a peptide hormone that is primarily synthesized in the gastric antrum and stimulates the secretion of histamine from enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells and subsequently acid from parietal cells in the gastric corpus. In addition, gastrin exerts a mitogenic function primarily on ECL cells and progenitor cells in the gastric isthmus. Current studies seek to understand how MEN1 mutations generate a mutant MENIN protein that abrogates its tumor suppressor function. Mutations in the MEN1 gene are broadly distributed throughout its nine protein-coding exons, making it difficult to correlate protein structure with its function. Although disruption of the Men1 locus in mice causes functional neuroendocrine tumors in the pituitary and pancreas, gastrinomas do not develop in these transgenic animal models. Prior studies of human gastrinomas suggest that tissue-specific microenvironmental cues in the submucosal foregut may contribute to tumorigenesis by reprogramming of epithelial cells toward the neuroendocrine phenotype. Accordingly, recent studies suggest that neural crest-derived cells are also sensitive to reprogramming when MEN1 is deleted or mutated. Thus, the goal of this report is to review our current understanding of how MENIN modulates gastrin gene expression while highlighting its role in the prevention/suppression of neuroendocrine cell transformation.

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