| Literature DB >> 24757565 |
Walid Sasi1, Anup K Sharma1, Kefah Mokbel2.
Abstract
Suppressors of cytokine signalling 1-7 (SOCS1-7) and cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein (CIS) are a group of intracellular proteins that are well known as JAK-STAT and several other signalling pathways negative feedback regulators. More recently several members have been identified as tumour suppressors and dysregulation of their biological roles in controlling cytokine and growth factor signalling may contribute to the development of many solid organ and haematological malignancies. This review explores their biological functions and their possible tumour suppressing role in human neoplasms.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24757565 PMCID: PMC3976820 DOI: 10.1155/2014/630797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Int ISSN: 2090-2182
Cytokine activation of janus kinases (JAKs).
| Cytokine receptor | Associated JAK(s) |
|---|---|
| Interferons | |
| IFN | JAK1 [ |
| IFN | JAK1 [ |
| IL-10 | JAK1 [ |
| IL-6 | JAK1 (IL-6R |
| Shared | JAK1 [ |
| Shared | JAK2 [ |
| Homodimer receptors (GH, EPO, prolactin, and TPO) | JAK2 [ |
Abbreviations: GM-CSF: granulocyte monocyte colony stimulating factor; EPO: erythropoietin; TPO: thrombopoietin.
Figure 1Activation and regulation of the JAK-STAT pathway. STAT homodimers or heterodimers translocate to the nucleus. Cytokines signal by approximating receptors and associated janus kinases (JAKs), initiating a cascade of phosphorylation (P). This results in the phosphorylation and dimerisation of STATs, which translocate to the nucleus initiating gene transcription. In addition to genes involved in survival, proliferation, and function, STATs initiate transcription of SOCS. SOCS inhibits cytokine signaling by (1) binding to JAKs and directly inhibiting their kinase activity; (2) blocking STAT recruitment to the cytokine receptor; and (3) targeting the receptor or its JAK for degradation by the proteasome.
Figure 2Structural characteristics of STAT proteins.
Figure 3SOCS family members.
Figure 4Versatility of SOCS protein functions. The different domains of SOCS proteins mediate distinct interactions and functions. Some of these are specific for certain SOCS family members such as the KIR-dependent inhibition of JAK activity by SOCS1 and SOCS3 and SOCS box-dependent substrate recognition in case of CIS. Other functions are more general such as competition for shared receptor motifs and Elongin B/C recruitment. The SOCS box is involved in as diverse as receptor interaction, adaptor coupling, target degradation, and control of SOCS protein stability.
SOCS family members associate with a variety of signalling proteins and inhibit signalling by many cytokines.
| Name | Induced and/or Inhibits signalling by | Associates with |
|---|---|---|
| CIS | IL-2 [ | IL-2 R [ |
| SOCS1 | IL-2 [ | JAK1 [ |
| SOCS2 | IL-1 | IGF-I R [ |
| SOCS3 | IL-1 | IL-1 |
| SOCS4 | EGF [ | EGF R [ |
| SOCS5 | IL-6 [ | IL-4 R [ |
| SOCS6 | IGF-I [ | IGF-I R [ |
| SOCS7 | GH [ | GH R [ |
Abbreviations: R: receptor; PKC: protein kinase C; OSM: oncostatin M; Tpo: thrombopoietin; BFGF: basic fibroblast growth factor; CNTF: ciliary neurotrophic factor; CT1: cardiotrophin-1; TSLP: thymic stromal lymphopoietin; TCR: T cell receptor; INS: insulin; SCF: stem cell factor.
In vivo disorders resulting from SOCS proteins manipulation.
| Gene | Knockout phenotype | Transgenic phenotype | Main affected cytokines | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIS | (?) Increased haematopoiesis, disturbed lactation, and increased susceptibility to infections with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at CIS promoter position 292 | Reduced weight, defective mammary gland development, altered T and NK cell responses | STAT5 signalling (GH, EPO, IL-2, IL-3, and PRL) | [ |
|
| ||||
| SOCS1 | Multiorgan inflammation, neonatal lethality, lymphocyte apoptosis, and haematopoietic infiltrations | Disturbed T-lymphocyte development and spontaneous T cell activation | IFN | [ |
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| SOCS2 | Gigantism | Gigantism | GH and IGF-1 | [ |
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| SOCS3 | Embryonic lethality, placenta defects, disturbed erythropoiesis, and enhanced response to G-CSF | Embryonic lethality, increased Th2 differentiation, and reduced pancreatic | gp130, IL-2, IL-6, G-CSF, leptin, and EPO | [ |
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| SOCS4 | ? | ? | ? | |
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| SOCS5 | (?) No obvious phenotype (redundancy with SOCS4?) | Disturbed Th2 differentiation, increased peritoneal IL-2 and IFN | IL-4 and EGF | [ |
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| SOCS6 | Mild growth retardation (redundancy with SOCS7?) | Improved glucose and insulin tolerance | Insulin (?) | [ |
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| SOCS7 | Hydrocephalus, 50% mortality, Hyperinsulinemia | ? | Insulin | [ |