| Literature DB >> 25309874 |
Demin Li1, Massimo Masiero1, Alison H Banham1, Adrian L Harris2.
Abstract
The Notch pathway is increasingly attracting attention as a source of therapeutic targets for cancer. Ligand-induced Notch signaling has been implicated in various aspects of cancer biology; as a consequence, pan-Notch inhibitors and therapeutic antibodies targeting one or more of the Notch receptors have been investigated for cancer therapy. Alternatively, Notch ligands provide attractive options for therapy in cancer treatment due to their more restricted expression and better-defined functions, as well as their low rate of mutations in cancer. One of the Notch ligands, Jagged1 (JAG1), is overexpressed in many cancer types, and plays an important role in several aspects of tumor biology. In fact, JAG1-stimulated Notch activation is directly implicated in tumor growth through maintaining cancer stem cell populations, promoting cell survival, inhibiting apoptosis, and driving cell proliferation and metastasis. In addition, JAG1 can indirectly affect cancer by influencing tumor microenvironment components such as tumor vasculature and immune cell infiltration. This article gives an overview of JAG1 and its role in tumor biology, and its potential as a therapeutic target.Entities:
Keywords: Jagged1; Notch pathway; angiogenesis; cancer stem cells; cancer therapy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25309874 PMCID: PMC4174884 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Structure and function of human JAG1. JAG1 is a type I transmembrane protein with an extracellular region featuring 16 epidermal growth factor (EGF) repeats followed by a cysteine-rich domain (CRD). Notch receptors bind to the DSL domain that is located N-terminal to the EGF repeats. A C2 phospholipid recognition domain at the very N-terminus reduces Notch activation upon binding to phospholipid bilayers. The CD46 recognition site largely overlaps with the Notch binding site. JAG1 can be cleaved by ADAM17 metalloprotease to release soluble protein, mediating paracrine Notch signaling on neighboring cells. It can also be processed intramembranously by γ-secretase to release the intracellular domain, within which the C-terminal PDZ-ligand motif is responsible for the intrinsic reverse signaling induced by JAG1.
Figure 2JAG1 in cancer biology. JAG1 expressed by cancer and/or stromal cells induces tumor cell growth and inhibits their apoptosis. JAG1 also induces and helps maintaining the cancer stem cell population, and enhances metastasis formation by inducing EMT. Meanwhile, in the tumor microenvironment, JAG1 promotes tumor-associated angiogenesis, and inhibits tumor-specific immunity by inducing regulatory T (Treg) cells.
JAG1 involvement in individual cancer types.
| Tumor type | Oncogene or tumor suppressor | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Oncogene | Overexpression correlating with poor prognosis | ( |
| Knockdown inhibiting cell growth, inducing cell cycle arrest | ( | ||
| Promoting cancer stem cells | ( | ||
| Promoting EMT via SLUG/E-cadherin | ( | ||
| Promoting osteolytic bone metastasis | ( | ||
| Association with triple negative/basal-like subtype | ( | ||
| Brain tumors | Oncogene | Promoting tumor growth | ( |
| Maintaining cancer stem-like cells | ( | ||
| Overexpression in glioblastoma blood vessels | ( | ||
| Cervical cancer | Oncogene | Overexpression in cancer | ( |
| Downregulating Mfng | ( | ||
| Co-operating with HPV16-E6/E7 for cell transformation | ( | ||
| Downregulation suppressing cancer invasiveness | ( | ||
| Colorectal cancer | Oncogene | Mediating Wnt-induced Notch activation in tumorigenesis | ( |
| Deletion reducing tumor growth in mouse model | ( | ||
| Mediating tumor invasion in mouse model | ( | ||
| Paracrine promotion of cancer stem cell phenotype – soluble JAG1 | ( | ||
| Overexpression correlating with increased Notch activity in cancer | ( | ||
| Tumor growth inhibition by JAG1 knockdown | ( | ||
| Mediating APEX1-induced cancer progression in mouse model | ( | ||
| Endometrial cancer | Oncogene | Overexpression correlating with poor prognosis | ( |
| Gastric cancer | Oncogene | Expression correlating with tumor aggressiveness and poor survival | ( |
| Tumor growth inhibition by JAG1 knockdown | ( | ||
| Head and neck cancer | Oncogene | Notch/JAG1 co-expression indicating poor prognosis | ( |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Oncogene | Overexpression correlates with tumor nodule number | ( |
| Maintaining cancer stem cells | ( | ||
| Overexpression correlating with poor outcome | ( | ||
| Non-small cell lung cancer | Oncogene | Silencing causing cancer cell apoptosis | ( |
| Preventing cancer cell apoptosis | ( | ||
| Ovarian cancer | Oncogene | Tumor-associated expression | ( |
| Promoting cancer cell proliferation and dissemination via Notch3 activation | ( | ||
| Knockdown impairing tumor growth and sensitizing to chemotherapy | ( | ||
| Pancreatic cancer | Oncogene | Expression correlating with chemoresistance | ( |
| Overexpression in tumors | ( | ||
| Expression associated with tumor angiogenesis | ( | ||
| Prostate cancer | Oncogene | Upregulation in metastatic cases | ( |
| Knockdown reducing cell growth and invasion | ( | ||
| Renal cancer | Oncogene | Overexpression correlating with poor prognosis | ( |
| Inducing cell proliferation and adhesion | ( | ||
| Acute myeloid leukemia | Tumor suppressive | Suppressing cancer cell growth | ( |
| High expression correlating with favorable prognosis | ( | ||
| Oncogene | Driver of osteoblast mutated β-catenin-induced leukemogenesis | ( | |
| Anaplastic large cell lymphoma | Oncogene | Overexpression in tumor cells, promoting tumor cell proliferation and survival | ( |
| B-Acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Oncogene | Supporting cancer cell survival | ( |
| B-Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | Oncogene | Expression in tumor cells, inhibiting tumor cell apoptosis | ( |
| Burkitt’s lymphoma | Oncogene | Angiocrine loop in vascular niche promoting tumor growth, aggressiveness, and chemoresistance | ( |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | Oncogene | Overexpression in tumor cells, promoting tumor cell proliferation | ( |
| Multiple myeloma | Oncogene | Overexpression in tumor cells, promoting tumor cell proliferation | ( |