| Literature DB >> 24995158 |
Amelia L Parker1, Maria Kavallaris2, Joshua A McCarroll2.
Abstract
Microtubules are highly dynamic structures, which consist of α- and β-tubulin heterodimers, and are involved in cell movement, intracellular trafficking, and mitosis. In the context of cancer, the tubulin family of proteins is recognized as the target of the tubulin-binding chemotherapeutics, which suppress the dynamics of the mitotic spindle to cause mitotic arrest and cell death. Importantly, changes in microtubule stability and the expression of different tubulin isotypes as well as altered post-translational modifications have been reported for a range of cancers. These changes have been correlated with poor prognosis and chemotherapy resistance in solid and hematological cancers. However, the mechanisms underlying these observations have remained poorly understood. Emerging evidence suggests that tubulins and microtubule-associated proteins may play a role in a range of cellular stress responses, thus conferring survival advantage to cancer cells. This review will focus on the importance of the microtubule-protein network in regulating critical cellular processes in response to stress. Understanding the role of microtubules in this context may offer novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: microtubule-associated proteins; microtubules; post-translational modifications; stress response; tubulin
Year: 2014 PMID: 24995158 PMCID: PMC4061531 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Microtubules are dynamic structures that interact with diverse proteins. (A) Microtubules form a dynamic network and are constantly lengthening and shortening. In interphase [(A), left], microtubules are anchored at the centrosome (minus end) and radiate toward the cell periphery (plus end). The microtubule network undergoes dramatic remodeling throughout the cell cycle, from interphase and through mitosis [(A), right]. Green: α-tubulin, blue: DAPI. Images courtesy of Dr. Sela Po’uha. (B) Heterodimers of α- and β-tubulin associate to form microtubules. The dynamic addition and removal of tubulin heterodimers is faster at microtubule plus ends than at microtubule minus ends. Both endogenous factors and TBAs regulate and influence microtubule dynamics. A variety of proteins involved in cellular homeostatic mechanisms and stress responses also interact with tubulins either in their soluble or polymerized forms. Post-translational modifications on tubulins influence these interactions. Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology [Ref. (9)], Copyright 2011 and Nature Reviews Cancer [Ref. (15)], Copyright 2010.
Tubulin isotypes present in humans [Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Reviews Cancer (Ref. (.
| Tubulin isotype | Gene name | Accession number |
|---|---|---|
| α1A-Tubulin | TUBA1A | NP_006000 |
| α1B-Tubulin | TUBA1B | AAC31959 |
| α1C-Tubulin | TUBA1C | Q9BQE3 |
| α3C-Tubulin | TUBA3C | Q13748 |
| α3E-Tubulin | TUBA3E | NP_997195 |
| α4A-Tubulin | TUBA4A | NP_005991 |
| α8-Tubulin | TUBA8 | Q9NY65 |
| α-Like 3-Tubulin | TUBAL3 | NP_079079 |
| βI-Tubulin | TUBB | NM_178014 |
| βII-Tubulin | TUBB2A, TUBB2B | NM_001069; NM_178012 |
| βIII-Tubulin | TUBB3 | NM_006086 |
| βIVa-Tubulin | TUBB4 | NM_006087 |
| βIVb-Tubulin | TUBB2C | NM_006088 |
| βV-Tubulin | TUBB6 | NM_032525 |
| βVI-Tubulin | TUBB1 | NM_030773 |
The authors direct readers to comprehensive reviews (.
Clinical studies of tubulin alterations in cancer.
| Microtubule alteration | Observation | Effect | Cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altered isotype expression | High βI-tubulin | Poor response to docetaxel treatment | Breast cancer | ( |
| High βIII-tubulin expression | Poor survival, poor outcome for surgical resection or TBA response; correlates with subtype | Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) | ( | |
| Correlates with poor survival, poor response to platinum and taxane treatment, advanced stage, or aggressive disease | Ovarian cancer | ( | ||
| Favorable response to taxane treatment | Ovarian (clear cell adenocarcinoma) | ( | ||
| Poor response to taxane treatment | Breast cancer | ( | ||
| Correlates with disease stage | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | ( | ||
| Correlates with disease stage | Glioblastoma | ( | ||
| Localized to invasive edge | Colorectal cancer | ( | ||
| Poor response to taxane/platinum treatment | Uterine serous carcinoma | ( | ||
| Poor response to taxane treatment | Gastric cancer | ( | ||
| Aggressive disease, patient outcome | Prostate cancer | ( | ||
| Low βII-tubulin expression | Correlates with poor response to taxane treatment or advanced stage disease | Breast and ovarian cancer | ( | |
| High βIVa-tubulin expression | Poor response to taxol treatment | Ovarian cancer | ( | |
| High βV-tubulin expression | Favorable response to taxane treatment | NSCLC | ( | |
| High α1b-tubulin expression | Histological grade | Hepatocellular carcinoma | ( | |
| High γ-tubulin expression | Poorly differentiated | Medulloblastoma | ( | |
| Altered post-translational modification | High Δ2α-tubulin | Poor response to vinca alkaloid treatment | Advanced NSCLC | ( |
| High detyrosinated tubulin | Disease aggressiveness | Breast cancer | ( | |
| Active tyrosination cycle | Favorable patient outcome | Neuroblastoma | ( |
Figure 2Microtubules regulate and co-ordinate diverse cellular stress responses in cancer cells. Alterations in the expression of tubulin isotypes, tubulin post-translational modifications, and the interaction of microtubules with MAPs seen in cancer affect a wide range of homeostatic mechanisms in response to cellular stress. Microtubules may function to co-ordinate stress responses across the cell, resulting in enhanced cell survival in the harsh tumor microenvironment, resistance to chemotherapy treatment, and the development of more aggressive disease; MT, microtubules.