Axl receptor tyrosine kinase (hereafter Axl) is a member of the tyrosine-protein kinase receptor Tyro3, Axl and proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Mer family of receptor tyrosine kinases, possessing multiple different functions in normal cells. Axl is overexpressed and activated in numerous different human cancer types, triggering several signaling pathways and enhancing tumor progression. The present review assesses previous studies on the function of Axl in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Axl is overexpressed in the tumor tissues of a number of patients with NSCLC and is associated with poorer clinical outcomes; it promotes NSCLC tumor growth, invasion/metastasis, drug resistance and the epithelial-mesenchymal transition, thus providing a survival advantage to tumor cells. Therefore, Axl may be a promising target in NSCLC treatment.
The role of leptin and its receptors (OBRs) in the pathogenesis of various primary human malignancies has been demonstrated. However, their expression and clinicopathological significance in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is not fully understood. In this study, we examined the expression of leptin and OBRs in 76 PTC samples using immunohistochemistry, and their associations with clinicopathological parameters were evaluated. The expression of OBRs was observed in the tumor cell membrane and/or cytoplasm, with a positive rate of 73.7% (56/76), while leptin was expressed in the tumor cell cytoplasm in 55 of 76 cases (72.4%). The expression of either protein was associated with greater tumor size (P=0.016 for leptin and P=0.002 for OBRs). In addition, the expression levels of leptin and OBRs were associated with each other. Neither leptin nor OBR expression levels were associated with other parameters, including age, body weight, postmenopausal state, multifocality and lymph node metastasis. These data suggest that the expression of leptin and/or OBRs in PTC is associated with tumor size and may be a potential target in PTC.
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