“…Aberrant growth factor receptor expression and activity has been shown to be important in the pathogenesis of a variety of malignancies, and a variety of growth factors and GFRs are aberrantly expressed in pediatric cancer cells and tumors (Goumnerova 1996;Abella and Park 2009), including the neurotrophin receptors TrkA, TrkB, and TrkC (Thiele et al, 2009); fibroblast growth factor receptors (Janet et al, 1995;Duplan et al, 2002;Goldstein et al, 2007), platelet-derived growth factor receptors (PDGFR) (Matsui et al, 1993;Östman and Heldin, 2007;Thorarinsdottir et al, 2008;Shimada et al, 2008), vascular endothelial growth factor receptors(VEGFR) (Meister et al, 1999;Langer et al, 2000, Fakhari et al, 2002Nowicki et al, 2007;Slongo et al, 2007), c-kit (Shimada et al, 2008;Blom et al, 2010;Puputti et al, 2010), RET (Hishiki et al, 1998), c-Met (Hecht et al, 2004;Li et al, 2005;Diomedi-Camassei et al, 2008), and the ErbB receptor family (EGFR, her-2, her-3, her-4) (Bredel et al, 1999;Bodey et al, 2005;Vasei et al, 2009;Patereli et al, 2010;Izycka-Swieszewska et al, 2011). However, the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of GFR expression in pediatric cancer cells are not well understood.…”