| Literature DB >> 21203498 |
Hélène Plun-Favreau1, Patrick A Lewis, John Hardy, L Miguel Martins, Nicholas W Wood.
Abstract
Cancer and neurodegeneration are often thought of as disease mechanisms at opposite ends of a spectrum; one due to enhanced resistance to cell death and the other due to premature cell death. There is now accumulating evidence to link these two disparate processes. An increasing number of genetic studies add weight to epidemiological evidence suggesting that sufferers of a neurodegenerative disorder have a reduced incidence for most cancers, but an increased risk for other cancers. Many of the genes associated with either cancer and/or neurodegeneration play a central role in cell cycle control, DNA repair, and kinase signalling. However, the links between these two families of diseases remain to be proven. In this review, we discuss recent and sometimes as yet incomplete genetic discoveries that highlight the overlap of molecular pathways implicated in cancer and neurodegeneration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21203498 PMCID: PMC3009676 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Genetic determinants at the interface of cancer and neurodegeneration.
| Gene | Function | Role in Neurodegeneration | Role in Cancer |
|
| Unclear | Gain of function leads to PD | α-synuclein is aberrantly expressed and methylated in cancer |
|
| Kinase | Loss of function leads to PD | Somatic mutations in cancer (COSMIC Web site). Tumour suppressor? Induced by PTEN |
|
| Unclear | Loss of function leads to PD | Oncogene |
|
| Kinase, GTPase | Gain of function leads to PD | Somatic mutations in cancer (COSMIC Web site). Oncogene? |
|
| ATPase | Loss of function leads to PD | ALP plays an important role in cancer. |
|
| Phospholipase A2 | Mutations lead to infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD), idiopathic neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) and dystonia-parkinsonism | PLA2G6 was identified as a risk factor for melanoma |
|
| Microtubule-associated protein | Mutations in Tau lead to AD and FTDP-17 | Reduced expression in several tumours. |
|
| Unclear | Gain of function leads to AD type | APP is overexpressed in acute myeloid leukemia patients with complex karyotypes |
|
| Superoxide dismutase | Gain of function leads to ALS. Mutations thought to cause cell death via aggregation and oxidative damage | Role in breast cancer? |
|
| Unclear | Gain of function leads to HD | |
|
| E3 ubiquitin ligase | Loss of function leads to PD | Tumour suppressor |
|
| Kinase (PI3K) | Mutations in the | Tumour suppressor. |
|
| Kinase | CDK5 can phosphorylate Tau | Somatic mutations in cancer. |
|
| Transcription factor | Functional link between p53 and parkin, Ab and APP | Tumour suppressor |
|
| Phosphatase | Functional link between PTEN and PINK1, parkin and DJ-1 | Tumour suppressor, mutated in sporadic and inherited tumours |
|
| Kinase | May play a role in neurodegeneration through inhibition of autophagy. | Autophagy can be both oncogenic as well as tumour suppressive. |
|
| Vesicular transport | May play a role in neurodegeneration through mTOR-dependant autophagy. | Tumour suppressors |
Common factors and overlapping pathways can be identified in the progression of both cancer and neurodegeneration. A number of molecules genetically associated with these diseases are kinases and/or play a role in apoptosis, cell cycle, and DNA repair. Protein degradation pathways are often disturbed in both cancer and neurodegeneration. Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress are also shown to cause both diseases. Finally, the autophagic lysosomal pathway is increasingly recognised as playing a major role in the physiopathological mechanisms associated with both the disorders. Importantly, all these processes are regulated during aging, the first risk factor for both cancer and neurodegeneration.
In bold—Strong genetic association with neurodegeneration.
In italic—Strong genetic association with cancer.
.
Figure 1Common pathways to cancer and neurodegeneration?
An illustration of some of the genes that are linked to cancer and neurodegeneration, and the crosstalk plus overlap between them. Although the links between genes involved in the individual disorders themselves are not yet completely clear (for example, there is evidence that there may be several parallel pathways leading to cell loss in the substantia nigra and the clinical symptom of parkinsonism), there is an intriguing picture emerging of fundamental links between cell proliferation and cell death. ALP, autophagy-lysosome pathway; UPS: ubiquitin-proteasome system.