| Literature DB >> 18728656 |
Abstract
Three phenotypically related genetic syndromes and their lesions (LKB1, PTEN, and TSC1/2) are identified as frequently altered in lung cancer. LKB1, a kinase inactivated in 30% of lung cancers, is discussed in this review. Loss of LKB1 regulation often coincident with KRAS activation allows for unchecked growth and the metabolic capacity to accommodate the proliferation.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18728656 PMCID: PMC2528145 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Summary results of studies reporting LKB1 mutation and other related events in lung cancer
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| 1998 | 10/12 LOH in NSCLC cell lines and 3/9 in SmCC cell lines in 19p13.2 | Allelotyping by PCR | Lung cancer cell lines used to define common, specific known, and novel deletions in NSCLC and SmCC cell lines |
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| 2000 | 7/12 (58%) patients with LOH at 19p in brain metastases of lung cancer patients, whereas glioma | Microsatellite PCR analysis and genomic sequencing | None of brain metastases showed |
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| 2002 | 5/20 of primary AC, 0/12 primary SCC; and 2/9 of lung cancer cell lines with mutation of | Microsatellite PCR, direct sequencing, long-range PCR | 0/12 mutations in SCC |
| 1/20 tumor with | Methylation-specific PCR | |||
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| 2003 | 9/35 loss of | Immunohistochemistry | LKB1 protein loss from AAH correlated with severe dysplasia, suggesting loss as essential to transition from pre- to malignant tumor. Also showed strong positive association between biallelic gene inactivation and negative protein expression |
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| 2004 | 5/19 lung AD with point mutations of | Direct sequencing, long-range PCR | Frequent observation of concurrent |
| 0/19 samples with promoter methylation of | Methylation-specific PCR | |||
| 10/18 of samples with LOH at 19p | Fluorescent | |||
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| 2004 | 6/11 AD contained | Allelotyping by PCR and sequencing | Several AD lines with |
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| 2007 | Lung cancer cell lines with mutations in | RT-PCR, sequencing and genomic sequencing | Strong positive correlation with |
| 8/70 lung cancer cell lines demonstrated shortened | Two cell lines with absent gene expression did not demonstrate mutation, suggesting alternate gene silencing method. The 9/70 with loss of | |||
| Primary tumors: 1/106 stage 1 tumor with | Small numbers limit interpretation for | |||
| 3/25 brain metastases of lung cancer patients with | ||||
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| 2007 | Primary tumors: 19/80 AD, 6/42 SCC, 1/7 LCC, and 1/4 ADSCC, respectively, with single copy alterations of | Direct sequencing, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification | SCC, AD, SCC, LCC, and AD: frequent loss of a single copy of |
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| 2007 | Cell lines with mutations in | Direct sequencing | Lung cancer cell lines examined |
| 3/100 primary tumors with | Direct sequencing |
ADSCC=adenosquamous carcinoma; AD=adenocarcinoma; AAH=atypical adenomatous hyperplasia; LCC=large cell carcinoma; LOH=loss of heterozygosity; NSCLC=non-small-cell lung cancer; PCR=polymerase chain reaction; SmCC=small cell carcinoma; SCC=squamous cell carcinoma.
Figure 1Energy sentinels in proliferation: LKB1 and AMPK. LKB1 is activated by binding STRAD and MO25. AMPK is a master regulator of metabolism, which is activated by LKB1 phosphorylation when the AMP/ATP ratio is high. AMPK drives catabolic pathways such as glucose uptake, glycolysis, mitochondrial proliferation, and fatty acid oxidation to generate ATP in times of stress. It also blunts ATP-consuming anabolic pathways including fatty acid, cholesterol, glycogen, and protein synthesis. The latter role of inhibiting protein synthesis through TSC1/2 and mTOR underlie AMPK's role in cell growth and proliferation. However, LKB1–AMPK regulation of fuel availability and the metabolic status is also central to proliferation. In fact, the LKB1 signal that cells should halt division when sufficient nutrients are not present overrides growth factor signalling through EGFR, for example. In sum, LKB1 and AMPK act together to sense energy stress to provide cells with nutrients for rapid energy production, while limiting growth. The sentinel activity of LKB1 and AMPK is lost in cancer, which allows unlimited proliferation despite metabolic cues to the contrary.