| Literature DB >> 25084828 |
Samantha Kaufhold, Benjamin Bonavida.
Abstract
Snail1 is the founding member of the Snail superfamily of zinc-finger transcription factors, which also includes Snail2 (Slug) and Snail3 (Smuc). The superfamily is involved in cell differentiation and survival, two processes central in cancer research. Encoded by the SNAI1 gene located on human chromosome 20q13.2, Snail1 is composed of 264 amino acids and usually acts as a transcriptional repressor. Phosphorylation and nuclear localization of Snail1, governed by PI3K and Wnt signaling pathways crosstalk, are critical in Snail1's regulation. Snail1 has a pivotal role in the regulation of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), the process by which epithelial cells acquire a migratory, mesenchymal phenotype, as a result of its repression of E-cadherin. Snail1-induced EMT involves the loss of E-cadherin and claudins with concomitant upregulation of vimentin and fibronectin, among other biomarkers. While essential to normal developmental processes such as gastrulation, EMT is associated with metastasis, the cancer stem cell phenotype, and the regulation of chemo and immune resistance in cancer. Snail1 expression is a common sign of poor prognosis in metastatic cancer, and tumors with elevated Snail1 expression are disproportionately difficult to eradicate by current therapeutic treatments. The significance of Snail1 as a prognostic indicator, its involvement in the regulation of EMT and metastasis, and its roles in both drug and immune resistance point out that Snail1 is an attractive target for tumor growth inhibition and a target for sensitization to cytotoxic drugs.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25084828 PMCID: PMC4237825 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-014-0062-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Figure 1Amino acid sequences:human and mouse. This figure provides the human Snail1 amino acid sequence. The second representation of the sequence has important features such as phosphorylation sites and zinc fingers highlighted in various colors. 1) Purple indicates nuclear localization signals 2) blue is motif 1 for GSK-3β-mediated phosphorylation 3) green is motif 2 for GSK-3β-mediated phosphorylation 4) yellow is the PAK1 phosphorylation site and 5) gray denotes the zinc-finger region. In addition, human Snail2 (Slug) and mouse Snail1 amino acid sequences are shown for comparison to the human Snail1 sequence. Human Slug is 48% identical to human Snail1, and mouse Snail1 is 88% identical to human Snail1. The sequence alignments were run through BLAST [9].
Figure 2Regulation at the Snail1 promoter. This figure depicts the regulatory interactions at the human Snail1 promoter. The central line represents the base-paired sequence, with -750 to -1 bp shown. The relative locations of interactions with various transcription factors are then spatially compared using blocks to represent each regulator’s binding site. Each block, with the base pairs involved denoted at the top, shows where that particular protein binds the Snail1 promoter.
Figure 3Snail1 stability and localization. This figure shows the effects of GSK-3β and PAK1-mediated phosphorylation on Snail1 stability and subcellular localization. The outer circle represents the cell membrane, and the inner circle represents the nucleus. Nuclear Snail1 is phosphorylated by GSK-3β at motif 2 and is consequently exported from the nucleus. If Snail1 remains in the cytoplasm, it is ultimately ubiquitinated and degraded. By contrast, phosphorylation by PAK1 favors the nuclear localization of Snail1, which increases its stability.
Regulation of Snail1 expression
| LOXL2/3 | SNAG domain; K98 and K127 | Notch/Lox | [ |
| NF-κB | Promoter: -194 to -78 bp | TNFα, RANKL, PI3K/Akt | [ |
| HIF-1α | Promoter: -750 to -643 bp | Hypoxic conditions | [ |
| SMADs | Promoter: -631 to -506 bp | TGF-β1, Ras | [ |
| IKKα | Promoter: -631 to -506 bp (concurrent with SMADs) | TGF-β1, Ras, PI3K/Akt | [ |
| HMGA2 | Promoter: 2 regions within -131 to -92 bp | TGF-β1 | [ |
| YY1 | 3’ Enhancer | NF-κB | [ |
| Egr-1 | Promoter: 4 sites between -450 and -50 bp | HGF, MAPK | [ |
| PARP-1 | Promoter: SIRE | ILK | [ |
| Gli1 | There are 4 candidate GLI binding sites (consensus sequence for binding: 5'-GACCACCCA-3') | Shh, Wnt | [ |
| STAT3 | Promoter | IL-6/JAK, HB-EGF/EGFR/MEK/ERK (mice) | [ |
| MTA3 | Promoter | ER | [ |
| PAK1 | S246 | | [ |
| GSK-3β | Motif 1 (S96, S100, S104) and Motif 2 (S107, S111, S115, S119) | Wnt, PI3K/Akt, FGF | [ |
| Snail1 | Promoter: E box within SIRE | Binds to own promoter | [ |
Gene targets regulated by Snail1
| E-cadherin | Epithelial marker, adherens junctions | Repression | [ |
| RKIP | Tumor suppressor | Repression | [ |
| PTEN | Tumor suppressor | Repression | [ |
| Occludin | Epithelial marker, tight junctions | Repression | [ |
| Claudins | Epithelial markers, tight junctions | Repression | [ |
| Mucin-1 | Epithelial marker | Repression | [ |
| ZEB-1 | Assists in induction of EMT | Upregulation | [ |
| Vimentin | Mesenchymal marker | Upregulation | [ |
| Fibronectin | Mesenchymal marker | Upregulation | [ |
| Cytokeratin 18 | Epithelial marker | Repression | [ |
| MMP-2/MMP-9 | Mesenchymal markers | Upregulation | [ |
| LEF-1 | Mesenchymal marker, assists in induction of EMT | Upregulation | [ |
Snail1 expression in cancers (listed in alphabetical order)
| Bladder carcinoma | Inverse correlation with E-cadherin [ | Increased expression in node-positive vs. node-negative tumors; 3 year progression free survival rate with positive Snail expression only 15% [ | Snail expression associated with tumor recurrence; elevated expression is significant, independent prognostic factor [ | [ |
| Breast carcinoma | None in normal breast epithelium; in 47% of IDCs (n = 17); none in ILCs (n = 4); expression correlates with lymph node metastases; not found in cells with constitutively inactive E-cadherin; expression opposes E-cadherin [ | Snail expression in IDCs (n = 17): grade 1—none; grade 2—more than half; grade 3—most [ | Potential marker of IDC malignancy [ | [ |
| Cervical carcinoma | Snail expressed in 94% of samples (n = 70) and ZEB-1 in 96%; nuclear expression of both correlates with advanced FIGO stage and lymph node metastasis; expression of Snail correlates with poor differentiation [ | High Snail expression associated with late FIGO stage, lymph node metastasis, and poor differentiation [ | | [ |
| Colorectal carcinoma | Inverse correlation with E-cadherin [ | Increase in expression over disease progression: 15/23 stage III vs. 6/6 stage IV [ | Snail expression indicates high risk of distant metastases [ | [ |
| Gastric carcinoma | Snail expression higher in diffuse than intestinal type [ | Overexpression associated with tumor size, depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis, shortened survival [ | Considered independent predictor of poor prognosis [ | [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Inverse correlation of mRNA and protein levels with E-cadherin (E-cadherin in Hep-G2 while Snail in HuL-1, Changliver, HLE, and HLF cells) [ | Higher Snail expression in higher grade cases (n = 12) [ | Risk factor for early recurrence (n = 47) [ | [ |
| Melanomas | High mRNA expression in all tested melanoma cell lines but not primary melanocytes; low E-cadherin in presence of Snail [ | | | [ |
| Oral squamous carcinoma | Low E-cadherin/high Snail expression cells more invasive; E-cadherin positive had cuboidal shape and E-cadherin negative cells were spindle-shaped; inverse correlation with E-cadherin [ | | | [ |
| Ovarian carcinoma | Less expressed than in breast carcinoma [ | | High E-cadherin expression correlated with disease-free survival; MMP-2 is considered a marker of poor prognosis; Snail associated with distant metastases [ | [ |
| Pancreatic carcinoma | Inverse correlation with E-cadherin [ | | | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Significant loss of E-cadherin and syndecan 1 in high grades, along with high Snail; only nuclear localization in PC3 cell lines [ | High Snail expression correlates with high Gleason grade, increased malignancy [ | | [ |
| Synovial sarcoma | Snail mRNA found in all cases tested (n = 20), but E-cadherin mutations appear to be more important than Snail expression [ | [ |
Figure 4Structures of chemical inhibitors targeting Snail1. A) GN 25 and GN 29 [175]B) Co(III)-Ebox [176]C) Tranylcypromine [183]D) Trichostatin A [184]E) Pargyline [185]F) LBH589 [186] and G) Entinostat [187].
Chemical inhibitors that target Snail1-induced EMT
| GN25, GN29 | Snail/p53 interaction | Reduced proliferation, tumor progression; increased tumor regression | Only effective in K-Ras activated cancer cells and on wild-type p53 | [ |
| Co(III)-Ebox | Snail/E-cadherin interaction | Increased E-cadherin expression | | [ |
| Tranylcypromine | LSD1/LSD2 | Decreased Snail’s effects on EMT markers | | [ |
| Trichostatin A | HDAC1/HDAC2 | Reversed EMT marker expression | | [ |
| Pargyline | LSD1 | Abrogated Snail-induced EMT | | [ |
| LBH589 | HDAC | Abrogated Snail-induced EMT | | [ |
| Entinostat | HDAC | Increased E-cadherin and cytokeratin 18 expression, Decreased Twist, Snail, vimentin, N-cadherin; encouraged epithelial morphology; decreased cell migration | [ |