| Literature DB >> 25121098 |
Seemana Bhattacharya1, Mrinal Kanti Ghosh1.
Abstract
The process of cell death has important physiological implications. At the organism level it is mostly involved in maintenance of tissue homeostasis. At the cellular level, the strategies of cell death may be categorized as either suicide or sabotage. The mere fact that many of these processes are programmed and that these are often deregulated in pathological conditions is seed to thought. The various players that are involved in these pathways are highly regulated. One of the modes of regulation is via post-translational modifications such as ubiquitination and deubiquitination. In this review, we have first dealt with the different modes and pathways involved in cell death and then we have focused on the regulation of several proteins in these signaling cascades by the different deubiquitinating enzymes, in the perspective of cancer. The study of deubiquitinases is currently in a rather nascent stage with limited knowledge both in vitro and in vivo, but the emerging roles of the deubiquitinases in various processes and their specificity have implicated them as potential targets from the therapeutic point of view. This review throws light on another aspect of cancer therapeutics by targeting the deubiquitinating enzymes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25121098 PMCID: PMC4119901 DOI: 10.1155/2014/435197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Relative occurrence of the various modes of programmed cell death. The figure illustrates the relative occurrence of different modes of programmed cell death (in bold and italics). The signaling mechanisms that are triggered as a cellular response leading to a specific mode of cell death are also represented in the figure (normal text and arrows pointing towards the process).
Comparative analysis of the different modes of cell death.
| Feature | Mode | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apoptosis | Necrosis | Autophagic cell death | Pyroptosis | Paraptosis | Mitotic catastrophe | Senescence | |
| Programmed | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No |
| Change in cell volume | Reduction | Increases | — | — | — | Increases | — |
| Chromatin condensation | Yes and nuclear fragmentation | No | No | — | — | Micronucleation | Heterochromatinization |
| Organelle status | Generally unaltered | Swelling of organelles | Lysosomal rupture | — | Mitochondria and ER swelling | Multinucleated cells | — |
| Change in membrane dynamics | Blebbing and PS flipping | Ruptured | — | — | — | — | — |
| Cytoplasmic material | No sequestration/release | Released due to cell rupture | Sequestered by autophagic vacuolization | — | Vacuolization seen | — | Vacuolization seen |
| Mitochondrial response | Occasionally | Occasionally | Occasionally | — | — | Occasionally | No |
| Caspase dependence | In some cases | In some cases | In some cases (caspase-1) | In some cases (caspase-1 or 7) | No | In some cases (caspase-2) | — |
| Immunological response | Rarely | Yes | No | — | — | — | — |
| Inflammatory response | Generally no | Yes | — | Yes | — | — | — |
| ER stress response | Yes | — | Yes | — | — | — | — |
| DNA damage response | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — | Yes | Yes |
| Occurrence | During development, in adult tissues and pathological conditions | Physical injuries and pathological conditions | Stress response and development | In microbial infection as host defence | At times overlaps with other PCDs | Triggered by mitotic failure | Mainly stress-induced, during aging, and may involve telomere-shortening |
DUBs and their substrates involved in cell death pathways.
| Deubiquitinase | Substrate | Hydrolyzes Ub-linkage | Relevance in cell death |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ubiquitin specific proteases | |||
| USP1 | FANCD2 | — | Activates Chk1 |
| PCNA | — | ||
| PHLPP | K48 | Inhibits Akt to induce apoptosis | |
| USP2 | Cyclin D1 | K48 | Cell cycle progression |
| Mdm2 | K48 | Inhibition of p53 | |
| MdmX | K48 | Inhibition of p53 | |
| Fas | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| USP2a | RIP1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF |
| TRAF2 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| USP3 + BRCC36 | Rap80 | K63 | Maintain G2/M checkpoints on DSBs |
| USP4 | Rb, p107, p130 | Associates | Cell cycle arrest |
| TCF4 | — | Suppresses | |
| p53 | K48 | p53 stabilization | |
| USP7 (HAUSP) | PTEN | K63 | PCa progression |
| p53 | K48 | Apoptosis | |
| Rb | K48 | Differential regulation | |
| Mdm2/MdmX | K48 | Inhibits p53 | |
| Daxx | — | Regulates Mdm2 activity under stress | |
| p53/Mule | — | Indirect regulation of p53 | |
| H2B, Mdm2 | — | Regulates chromatin remodelling | |
| Tip60 | K48 | p53 dependent apoptosis | |
| Chfr | — | Enhanced ubiquitination of HDAC1 and upregulation of p21 | |
| ERCC6 | — | Stabilizes RNA Pol II-ERCC6 complex | |
| Claspin | K48 | Chk1 regulation | |
| FOXO 3a and 4 | K63 | Accumulation of p27 | |
| RIP1 | K63 | Positive regulation of TNF- | |
| p65-NF | — | Upregulates NF | |
| USP8 | ErbB3 via Nrdp1 | — | Activation of EGFR pathway |
| USP9X | Mcl-1 | K48 | Radioresistance |
| USP10 | p53 | K48 | Stabilizes p53 |
| USP11 | I | — | Inhibition of NF |
| USP12 | PHLPP | K48 | Inhibition of Akt to induce apoptosis |
| USP15 | APC | K48 | Promotes |
| IKK- | K48 | Inhibition of NF | |
| USP19 | KPC1 | — | Accumulation of p27 |
| USP21 | RIP1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF |
| USP28 | cMyc | K48 | Reverses FBW7- |
| Chk2 | K48 | Chk2-p53-PUMA apoptosis | |
| USP29 | p53 | K48 | Stabilization of p53 |
| USP37 | Cyclin A | K48 | Induction of G1/S |
| USP39 | Aurora B | — | SAC integrity |
| USP42 | p53 | K48 | Enhances p53 stability |
| USP44 | Mad2/cdc20 | — | Inhibits APC/Ccdh1 complex |
| USP46 | PHLPP | K48 | Inhibition of Akt to induce apoptosis |
| USP47 | DNA Pol | — | BER response |
| USP50 | Wee1 | K48 | Prevents mitotic entry |
|
| |||
| Ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolases | |||
| UCH-L1 | Jab1 | Colocalizes | Inbihits p27 |
| BAP1 | BRCA-1 | — | Induction of G1/S |
| YY-1 | — | Induction of G1/S | |
| HCF-1 | — | Induction of G1/S | |
| CYLD | Plk-1 | — | G2/M protection |
| NEMO | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| TRAF 2, 6 and 7 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| RIP1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| TAK1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| BCL-3 | — | Induction of p50-BCL3 and p52-BCL3 complexes inhibiting cell proliferation | |
|
| |||
| Ovarian tumor proteases | |||
| A20 | RIP1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF |
| TRAF6 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
| Caspase 8 | K63 | Regulates caspase 8 activity | |
| OTUB1 | Ubc13 | Associates | Inhibits RNF168 |
| OTUD5 | p53 | K48 | Induction of apoptosis |
| Cezanne (OTUD7B) | RIP1 | K11 | Inhibition of NF |
| EGFR | — | Enhances EGFR signaling | |
| TRABID/ZRANB1 | APC | K63 | Induction of TCF4/ |
|
| |||
| JAMM/MPN domain-associated metallopeptidase | |||
| AMSH | EGFR | K63 | Regulates endocytic trafficking of EGFR |
| BRCC36 | H2A, H2AX | K63 | At sites of DSBs |
| POH1 | ErbB2 | — | Regulates EGFR signaling |
|
| |||
| Monocyte chemotactic protein-induced proteases | |||
| MCPIP1 | RIP1 | K63 | Inhibition of NF |
| TRAF2 and 6 | K63 | Inhibition of NF | |
Figure 2DUBs regulating cell death pathways. The figure illustrates the deubiquitinases regulating different pathways involved in cell death and cell growth in the perspective of cancer cells. The DUBs remove K48 (green), K63 (pink), and K11 (blue) linked Ub chains from their substrates. In some cases, the specific linkage remains unknown (?). The role of some of the DUBs is unclear in terms of deubiquitination of the substrate, but there is interaction (indicated by ⇔). Activation is represented by (→) and inhibition by (⊤).
Drugs targeting the DUBs.
| Drug | Target | Outcome | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple Targets | ||||
| Betulinic acid | Multiple DUBs | Accumulates poly-Ub targets and enhances their degradation via UPS; inhibits PCa cell proliferation and induces apoptosis | Specific in action against cancer cells without affecting normal cells | [ |
| Curcusone D | Multiple DUBs | ROS-induced inhibition of DUBs; growth inhibition and apoptosis of multiple myeloma (MM) cells | Shows synergistic effect with Bortezomib in MM | [ |
| PR-619 | Multiple DUBs | Accumulates polyubiquitinated proteins and enhances proteasomal activity | Small molecule inhibitor | [ |
| Cyclopentenone prostaglandins, dibenzylideneacetone, curcumin, and shikoccin | Cellular isopept-idase | Cell death in colon cancer cells | Very broad spectrum | [ |
| b-AP15 | UCH-L5 USP14 | Blocks proteasome function and promotes tumor cell apoptosis in preclinical models | High specificity | [ |
| P22077 | USP7 | Induction of apoptosis involving p53 by multiple pathways (Mdm2, Claspin, Tip60, etc.) | Specific small molecule inhibitor | [ |
| WP1130 | USP5 | Decreased Mcl-1, increased p53, stops cell proliferation and induces death in multiple myeloma (MM) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) | Poor solubility and pharmacokinetics | [ |
| G9 | USP9X | Decreased Mcl-1, increased p53, induces cell death in MM, MCL and melanoma | Better solubility and lesser toxicity than WP1130 | [ |
|
| ||||
| Specific Targets | ||||
| 3-Amino-2-keto-7H-thieno[2,3-b]pyridin-6-one derivatives | UCH-L1 | Moderately potent inhibitors | Does not show activity against other cysteine hydrolases | [ |
| Pimozide | USP1 | Shows synergistic effect with cisplatin in cytotoxicity of NSCLC | Specificity is high | [ |
| 2-cyanopyrimidine and triazine | USP2 | Specific biological data is absent | — | [ |
| HBX 41,108 | USP7 | Activates p53 and induces apoptosis in cancer cells | Shows some cross-reactivity | [ |
| HBX 19,818 | USP7 | Leads to cell cycle arrest in HCT116 cells | Specific inhibition of catalytic activity | [ |
| Spongiacidin C | USP7 | — | A natural pyrrole alkaloid | [ |
| HBX 90,397 | USP8 | Induces G1 arrest and inhibits cell growth in HCT116 and PC3 | Small molecule inhibitor | [ |
| 9-oxo-9 | USP8 | Antiproliferative and proapoptotic in cancer cell lines | Selective inhibitor | [ |
| 1-[1-(4-fluorophenyl)-2,5-dimethylpyrrol-3-yl]-2-pyrrolidin-1-ylethanone)-IU1 | USP14 | Enhances proteasome function and accelerates proteolysis | Small molecule inhibitor | [ |