| Literature DB >> 24213506 |
Saran Kumar1, Nithya Rao, Ruowen Ge.
Abstract
A Disintegrin-like And Metalloproteinase with ThromboSpondin motifs-ADAMTSs-are a multi-domain, secreted, extracellular zinc metalloproteinase family with 19 members in humans. These extracellular metalloproteinases are known to cleave a wide range of substrates in the extracellular matrix. They have been implicated in various physiological processes, such as extracellular matrix turnover, melanoblast development, interdigital web regression, blood coagulation, ovulation, etc. ADAMTSs are also critical in pathological processes such as arthritis, atherosclerosis, cancer, angiogenesis, wound healing, etc. In the past few years, there has been an explosion of reports concerning the role of ADAMTS family members in angiogenesis and cancer. To date, 10 out of the 19 members have been demonstrated to be involved in regulating angiogenesis and/or cancer. The mechanism involved in their regulation of angiogenesis or cancer differs among different members. Both angiogenesis-dependent and -independent regulation of cancer have been reported. This review summarizes our current understanding on the roles of ADAMTS in angiogenesis and cancer and highlights their implications in cancer therapeutic development.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24213506 PMCID: PMC3712723 DOI: 10.3390/cancers4041252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Domain structure of ADAMTS members with reported roles in angiogenesis/cancer.
Alternative names, substrates and knockout phenotypes of ADAMTS members implicated in angiogenesis and cancer.
| Protein | Alternative Names | Substrates | Knockout phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| METH-1, aggrecanase-3 | Aggrecan [ | a. Growth retardation, changes in kidney structure and impaired female fertility [ |
| Versican V1 [ | |||
| Nidogen 1 & 2 | |||
| Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor-2 [ | b. No effect on aggrecan turnover [ | ||
|
| PCINP | Procollagens type I, II, III and V [ | a. Fragile skin and male sterility [ |
|
| aggrecanase-1, KIAA0688 | Aggrecan [ | a. Phenotypically normal, no protection against aggrecan degradation [ |
| Versican [ | |||
| Brevican [ | |||
| Matrilin [ | |||
|
| aggrecanase-2, ADAMTS11, | Aggrecan [ | a. Normal lifespan, healthy and fertile [ |
| b. Reduced cartilage degradation in a mouse model of osteoarthritis [ | |||
| c. Delayed wound healing due to aggrecan deposition [ | |||
| d. Double knockout ( | |||
| e. Double knockout ( | |||
|
| METH-2 | Aggrecan [ | - |
|
| KIAA1312 | Aggrecan [ | a. Embryonically lethal [ |
| Versican [ | b. Haploinsufficiency causes increased angiogenesis [ | ||
| c. | |||
|
| - | COMP [ | a. Phenotypically normal and fertile [ |
| Aggrecan [ | b. Elevated angiogenesis [ | ||
| c. Severe inflammation [ | |||
|
| vWFCP | vWF [ | a. Viable and fertile [ |
|
| - | Aggrecan [ | Not known |
| Versican [ | |||
|
| - | Not known | Not known |
ADAMTS role in angiogenesis.
| Protein | Dependence on catalytic activity | Involvement of TSRs | Role in Angiogenesis |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Yes (Pro-angiogenic) [ | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ | - Suppresses EC proliferation in a cell-specific, dose dependent manner [ | ||
| No (Anti-angiogenic) [ | - Disrupts growth factor induced angiogenesis | ||
| - Suppresses tumor angiogenesis in T47D human breast carcinoma [ | |||
| - Regulates angiogenesis in ischemic myocardium [ | |||
| - Suppresses tumor angiogenesis in HT-1080, DU145 and CHO-K1 tumors [ | |||
| - Alters blood vessel morphology in prostate tumors [ | |||
| - Induced by VEGF in ECs and ischemia induced retinal neovascularization [ | |||
|
| |||
| - Induction of ADAMTS1 to degrade basement membrane versican in VEGF-induced pathological angiogenesis [ | |||
| - Promotes tumor angiogenesis in TA3 mammary carcinoma and Lewis lung carcinoma [ | |||
| - Induces endothelial-like phenotype in plastic tumor cells [ | |||
|
| No (Anti-angiogenic) [ | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - Suppressed VEGF-stimulated EC proliferation in a cell-specific manner, induces apoptosis and inhibits capillary network formation of HUVEC [ | |||
| - Increased blood vessels | |||
| - Suppressed tumor angiogenesis in ADAMTS2 overexpressing tumors [ | |||
|
| Yes (Pro-angiogenic) [ | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - Anti-angiogenic peptide from ADAMTS4 TSR suppresses EC proliferation and VEGF-induced HUVEC migration [ | |||
| - Truncated ADAMTS4 fragment inhibits HuDMEC differentiation and migration in a scratch wound healing assay [ | |||
| - ADAMTS4 | |||
|
| |||
| - Full-length ADAMTS4 promotes tumor angiogenesis [ | |||
|
| No (Anti-angiogenic) [ | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - ADAMTS5 is anti-angiogenic | |||
|
| Not known | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - Inhibits EC proliferation in a cell-specific reversible manner | |||
| - Disrupts growth factor induced angiogenesis | |||
|
| Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ | No (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - Knockdown of ADAMTS9 in cultured ECs suppresses | |||
| - Increased corneal neovascularization and tumor vascularization in | |||
| - Suppresses oesophageal and nasopharyngeal carcinoma angiogenesis [ | |||
|
| No (Anti-angiogenic) [ | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - Inhibits capillary network formation by BAE-1 cells in 3D collagen gels [ | |||
| - | |||
|
| Not known | Yes (Anti-angiogenic) [ |
|
| - ADAMTS13 inhibits VEGF-mediated angiogenesis-mediated HUVEC proliferation, migration and capillary network formation [ | |||
|
| |||
| - Full-length ADAMTS13 promoted HUVEC tube formation, induces EC proliferation and migration | |||
|
| Not known | Not known | Not known |
|
| Not known | Not known | Not known |
Expression and regulation of ADAMTSs in various cancers.
| Protein | Cancer type | Regulation |
|---|---|---|
|
| Lung cancer | Down-regulation of |
| Pancreatic cancer | ||
| Enhanced expression of | ||
| Prostate cancer | Markedly low protein levels in prostate cancer cells [ | |
| Chondrosarcoma | Transcriptional up-regulation in response to TNF-α [ | |
|
| Osteosarcoma | 8-fold increase in |
|
| Breast cancer | Enhanced mRNA expression in breast cancer compared to normal breast tissue [ |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Enhanced expression of | |
| Glioblastoma | Increased expression of | |
| Ewings sarcoma | Enhanced protein levels serving as a tumor-specific marker [ | |
|
| Breast carcinoma | Down-regulation of |
| Colorectal cancer | Epigenetically silenced by promoter methylation [ | |
| Prostate cancer | Down-regulation of | |
| Glioblastoma | Overexpression of | |
|
| Lung cancer | Down-regulation of |
| Down-regulation due to epigenetic silencing [ | ||
| Brain | Down-regulation due to promoter hypermethylation [ | |
|
| Breast carcinoma | Down-regulation of |
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Hypermethylation of | |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Promoter hypermethylation and association of lower levels of ADAMTS9 protein with lymph node metastasis in NPC [ | |
| Gastric cancer | Epigenetic silencing by promoter hypermethylation [ | |
| Pancreatic and colorectal cancer | Epigenetic silencing by promoter hypermethylation [ | |
|
| Colorectal cancer | Epigenetic silencing by promoter hypermethylation [ |
|
| Prostate, renal, testicular, head and neck squamous, colorectal, rectal, NSCLC, gastric, melanoma, adenocarcinoma and breast carcinoma. | Correlation of presence or absence of tumor metastasis with lower or higher vWF cleaving respectively [ |
| Colon cancer, leukemia, multiple myeloma, breast, stomach cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma | Decreased activity of ADAMTS13 in plasma of malignant patients [ | |
| Brain and prostate cancers | Mild reduction in ADAMTS13 activity but no correlation with malignancy and metastasis [ | |
|
| Colorectal and pancreatic cancer | Inactivation and loss of normal function of the protein due to somatic mutations [ |
| Colorectal cancer | Loss of heterozygosity in | |
| Breast cancer | Grade-specific down-regulation of | |
| Prostate cancer | Down-regulation of | |
|
| Breast cancer | Down-regulation of |
| Pancreatic, gastric and colorectal cancers | Hypermethylation of | |
| Kidney and colorectal cancers | Inactivation of | |
| Melanoma | Somatic mutations in |
Figure 2Role of ADAMTSs in angiogenesis and cancer. (a) Many ADAMTS members have been shown to be down-regulated in cancer. This down-regulation is mostly through epigenetic silencing (ADAMTS1, ADAMTS5, ADAMTS8, ADAMTS9, ADAMTS12 and ADAMTS18). Somatic mutations in ADAMTS gene have also been reported (ADAMTS13, ADAMTS15 and ADAMTS18). (b) ADAMTS members regulate angiogenesis and cancer in a complex manner that involves multiple mechanisms. Both proteinase-dependent and -independent anti-angiogenic/anti-tumorigenic mechanisms have been revealed. On the other hand, proteinase-dependent pro-angiogenic/pro-tumorigenic functions have also been reported. (c) Illustrations of molecular mechanisms by various ADAMTS members in angiogenesis and cancer. Examples include pro-angiogenic/pro-tumorigenic function through cleaving extracellular matrix substrates such as versican or brevican (e.g., ADAMTS1); help in releasing pro-angiogenic growth factors such as HB-EGF; proteinase-dependent release of anti-angiogenic fragments from ECM (ADAMTS1 releasing TSP1 and TSP2); proteinase-independent sequestration of pro-angiogenic factors (ADAMTS1); TSR-mediated (ADAMTS5) anti-angiogenesis and receptor mediated cell death (ADAMTS2).