| Literature DB >> 22862837 |
Hong-Qing Xi1, Xiao-Song Wu, Bo Wei, Lin Chen.
Abstract
Eph receptor tyrosine kinases and their ephrin ligands are involved in various signalling pathways and mediate critical steps of a wide variety of physiological and pathological processes. Increasing experimental evidence demonstrates that both Eph receptor and ephrin ligands are overexpressed in a number of human tumours, and are associated with tumour growth, invasiveness and metastasis. In this regard, the Eph/ephrin system provides the foundation for potentially exciting new targets for anticancer therapies for Eph-expressing tumours. The purpose of this review is to outline current advances in the role of Eph receptors and ephrin ligands in cancer, and to discuss novel therapeutic approaches of anticancer therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22862837 PMCID: PMC4393718 DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2012.01612.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Fig 1Eph/ephrin structure and signalling. (A) Domain structure of Eph receptors and ephrin ligands. The extracellular region of Eph receptors contains a ligand-binding domain, a cysteine-rich domain and two fibronectin type III repeats. The intracellular region contains a tyrosine kinase domain, a sterile α motif (SAM) domain and a PDZ-binding domain. Both ephrinA (GPI-anchored) ligands and ephrinB (transmembrane) ligands interact with the N-terminal globular domain of Eph receptor. (B) Binding Eph/ephrin molecules form heterotetramers to initiate signals. Both classes of Eph receptors and ephrins activate bidirectional signalling: forward signalling and reverse signalling. Eph receptors and ephrin ligands expressed in opposing cells interact in trans and lead to bidirectional signal transduction. EphA and ephrinA coexpressed in the same cell interact in cis. This impairs receptor activation and inhibits trans interaction.
Fig 2EphA/ephrinA bidirectional signalling. (A) Stimulation of ephrinA5 recruits and activates the Src-family kinase, FYN. Subsequently, FYN induces a change in the cellular architecture and adhesion of ephrinA5-expressing cells 68 and results in mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation 74. (B) EphA4 activates signal transducers and STAT3 50. EphA receptors directly activate GTPases of the Rho family (RHOA, RAC1 and CDC42) through the exchange factor Ephexin 51,52. This pathway involves EphA2 and PI3 kinase in endothelial cells 151. EphA2 inhibits Akt 190,191 and inactivates focal adhesion kinase (FAK) through the SHP2 phosphatase 48. EphA2 activates RHOA through FAK 192,193. EphA1 inhibits integrin-linked kinase (ILK)194. EphB/ephrinB bidirectional signalling. (C) Growth Factor Receptor Bound protein 4 (GRB4) contains a SH2 domain and can link ephrinB ligands to a signalling network that modifies cell morphology 77. EphrinB1 disrupts focal adhesions through GRB4 48. The phosphatase PTP-BL is recruited to the ephrinB carboxy-terminal tail. PTP-BL dephosphorylates ephrinB and inactivates Src 35. PDZ-RGS3 binds constitutively to ephrinB and catalyses the hydrolysis of GTP to GDP in the G-Alpha subunit of heterotrimeric GPCR. It also inhibits SDF1–mediated cell chemotaxis through the CXCR4 195. (D) EphB forward signalling activates RAC1 and CDC42 exchange factors 48,146,193. EphB2 activates Ras GAP to inhibit the H-RAS and R-RAS 48,196. EphB2 regulates cell positioning via PI3K 64. The EphB4 receptor suppresses breast cancer cell tumorigenicity through an Abl-Crk pathway 66. EphB2 regulates cell proliferation through an Abl-cyclin D1 pathway 64.
Expression of Eph receptors and ephrin ligands in cancers compared with normal tissues
| Cancer type | Expression | Ephs/ephrins | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Up | EphA2, EphB4 | |
| Down | – | – | |
| Colorectal cancer | Up | EphA1, EphA2, EphA3, EphA8, EphB4, ephrinA1, ephrinB2 | |
| Down | EphA6, EphA7, EphB1, EphB2 | ||
| Prostate cancer | Up | EphA2, EphA3, EphA5, EphA6, EphA7, EphA8, EphA10, EphB3, ephrinA2 | |
| Down | – | – | |
| Brain tumour, GBM | Up | EphA2, EphA3, EphA4, EphA7, EphB2, EphB4, ephrinB3 | |
| Down | – | – | |
| Melanoma | Up | EphA2, EphA3, EphB3, ephrinA1 | |
| Down | EphA4 | ||
| Lung cancer | Up | EphA2, EphB3 | |
| Down | – | – | |
| Hepatocellular cancer | Up | EphA3, ephrinA1 | |
| Down | – | – | |
| Gastric cancer | Up | EphA1, EphA2, EphA3, EphB2 | |
| Down | ephrinB1 |
Strategies targeting Eph receptors and ephrin ligands for cancer therapy
| Treatment | Target | Tumour | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| EphA2-FC, EphA3-FC | ephrinA | Breast cancer Pancreatic cancer | |
| EphB4-FC | EphB4 | Melanoma | |
| Mab2H9 antagonistic antibody | EphB2 | Colorectal cancer | |
| TNYL-RAW peptide | EphB4 | Breast cancer | |
| SNEW peptide | EphB2 | Breast cancer | |
| KYL, APY, VTM peptide | EphA4 | Angiogenesis | |
| 2,5-dimethylpyrroly benzoic acid derivatives | EphA4 | Angiogenesis | |
| Disalicylic Acid-furanyl derivative | EphA2 | Prostate cancer | |
| EA2,B233,3F2-WT antibody | EphA2 | Breast cancer | |
| EA5 antibody | EphA2 | Ovarian cancer | |
| mAB208 | EphA2 | Renal cell cancer | |
| Dimerized IIIA4 antibody | EphA3 | Malignant Melanoma | |
| YSA, SWL peptides | EphA2 | Breast cancer | |
| Dasatinib | EphA2 | Prostate cancer Ovarian cancer Pancreatic caner | |
| Benzenesulphonamide derivative | EphB4 | Angiogenesis | |
| Xanthine derivatives | EphB4 | Hepatocellular cancer | |
| EphA2 siRNA | EphA2 | Pancreatic cancer Ovarian cancer | |
| EphB4 siRNA | EphB4 | Breast cancer | |
| Oligonucleotides | EphB4 | Breast cancer Bladder cancer | |
| 64CU –DOTA-1C1 antibody | EphA2 | Colorectal cancer, Prostate cancer, Ovarian cancer, Glioblastoma, Malignant Melanoma | |
| 111Indium-labelled IIIA4 antibody | EphA3 | Malignant Melanoma | |
| ephrinA1-PE38QQR | EphA2 | Glioblastoma | |
| 1C1-maleimidocaproyl-MMAF conjugate | EphA2 | Prostate cancer | |
| 2H9 antibody-vc-MMAE conjugate | EphB2 | Colorectal cancer | |
| bscEphA2 × CD3 bispecific single-chain antibody | EphA2/CD3 | Breast cancer Colorectal cancer | |
| EphA2-DCs | EphA2 | Colon cancer | |
| EphA2833–891 peptide | EphA2 | Malignant gliomas | |
| EphA3- and EphB6-derived peptides | EphA3/EphB6 | Glioma | |