| Literature DB >> 25333772 |
Abstract
The insulin-like growth factor (IGF) axis promotes the growth of cells, tissues and organs. IGF-1 is mainly produced in the liver but is also secreted from local tissues. In the circulation, IGF-1 is bound to insulin-like binding proteins (IGFBPs), and when released it activates the insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R). The signal is further transmitted by intracellular signaling pathways leading to gene expression that regulates, among others, cell proliferation and survival. This review presents the IGF axis in the context of cell transformation and cancer development. Aspects involving IGF-1 deficiency and protection from cancer are also briefly described. Furthermore, human papillomaviruses (HPVs) interplaying with IGF axis components in cervical cancer development are described. These small dsDNA viruses are divided into low-risk and high-risk HPVs with regard to the potency of their oncogenic actions; they mainly infect epithelial or mucosal cells. Special attention is drawn to expression of two major HPV oncogenes (E6 and E7) initiating and maintaining cervical carcinogenesis, which is a multistep and multifactorial process; therefore, involvement of additional factors such as mitochondrial DNA changes, sex hormones, retinoic and folic acids are also discussed. Finally, IGF axis components and HPV oncogenes as targets in anticancer treatment are presented which include IGF-1R downregulation, RNA interference and anti-HPV therapeutic vaccines. The review concludes that despite an enormous advancement in research on IGF and HPV-related cancers, more molecular studies and clinical trials are needed before commercialized therapies are widely available for oncology patients.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25333772 PMCID: PMC4240475 DOI: 10.3892/or.2014.3505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Rep ISSN: 1021-335X Impact factor: 3.906
Figure 1Schematic presentation of IGF-1 axis actions. For simplicity only major IGFBP is shown (IGFBP3) forming a 150-kDa complex with the IGF-1 ligand and ALS (acid labile subunit). Notably, all 3 components of the IGF-1 axis can be translocated to the nucleus: i) IGF-1 (B isoform containing a nuclear localization signal at C-terminus of the E peptide, precise function unknown); ii) IGF-1R as demonstrated in renal cancer, probably involved in transcription regulation; iii) IGFBPs can be translocated to the nucleus via their nuclear receptors and have functions independent of IGF-1 and IGF-1R. Hybrid receptors (IGF-R/IR-A and IGF-R/IR-B) are also activated with lower affinity by IGF-1 ligand as compared to IGF-1R.
Summary of the possible correlations between IGF axis components, HPV status and cervical cancerogenesis.
| Risk/incidence of neoplastic change/cancer (increased↑/decreased↓/no associationΔ) | Correlation with serum or local tissue level (higher↑/lower↓/no changeΔ) | Correlation with HPV status (positive↑/negative↓/noneΔ) | Sample size, source of information | Authors (ref.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIN↑, | IGF-1↑ | HPVΔ | 126 cases (82 CIN), 40 controls | Lee |
| LSIL↑ | IGF-1↑ | nd | 267 cases, 238 controls | Wu |
| CC | IGF-1↑ | HPV↑ | 50 cases, 40 controls | Sharma |
| SIL↓ | IGFBP-3↑ | oncogenic HPV↓ | Harris | |
| SIL↑ | IGF-1↑ | oncogenic HPV↑ | 137 cases | |
| IGF-1/IGFBP-3 | HPV persistence↑ | |||
| CCΔ (no prediction) | IGF-1↓, IGFBP-3Δ | nd | 72 cases | Huang |
| CC, worse OS | IGF-R↑ (predictor) | |||
| HCIN↓ | IGF↑, IGFBP-3Δ | HPV-16 and -18↓ | 329 cases, 621 controls | Schaffer |
| CC↑ | IGF-1↓ | nd | 135 cases, 270 controls | Serrano |
| HSIL↑ and progression to CC↓ | IGFBP-3↓, IGF-R↓ | nd | 63 cases, 42 controls | Serrano |
| HSIL vs. control, LSIL vs CC | IGFBP-3↑ | HR-HPVΔ | 93 cases, 51 controls | Serrano |
| CIN III/CC↑ | IGF-R↑ | nd | cases 90, 30 controls | Kuramoto |
| CC↑ | IGF-R↑ | HPV | 72 cases | Huang |
| Control vs. all stages of CC↑ | IGF-2↑, IGFBP-3↓ | nd | 160 cases (11 groups), 23 controls | Mathur |
| Breast cancer↑ | IGF-system components↓ | - | 72 cases | Voskuil |
| Ovarian cancer↓ | IGFBP-3↑ | nd | 59 cases, 108 controls | Dal Maso |
| HPV E6/E7 induced cells | IGFBP-3↑ and IGF-1↑ | HPV↑ | Basic research | Berger |
| Cervical cells with E6/E7 | IGF-R↑ | Basic research | Baege |
For comparison one example of another type of cancer is provided as well as the results of basic research. Details are discussed in the text. IGF, insulin-like growth factor; CIN, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; HCIN, high-grade CIN; SIL, squamous intraepithelial lesion; HSIL, high-grade SIL; LSIL, low-grade SIL; CC, cervical cancer; OS, overall survival; HR-HPV, high-risk human papillomavirus.
Statistical significance;
nd, no data.
Figure 2Schematic representation of cervical neoplasia as a multifactor process. A multitude of factors with oncogenic activities are gathered in six groups. For clarity, the potential or known interactions between these groups are not indicated as they are discussed in the text. Special attention is drawn to the IGF axis and HPV oncogenes.
Examples of therapeutic approaches in IGF and HPV-related cancers.
| Target | Method/Tool | Authors (ref.) |
|---|---|---|
| IGF-R | IGF-R specific mAbs | Shen |
| Small molecules targeting IGF-1R (tyrosine kinase inhibitors) | Gao | |
| IGF-1 or IGF-2 | Ligand-neutralizing antibodies | Gao |
| IGF-1R mRNA | Antisense RNA | Nakamura |
| MicroRNA (miR-497) | Luo | |
| Multiple targets for IGF axis | Multiple drug therapies | Baserga ( |
| HPV E6/E7 | Synthetic interference RNA | Butz |
| Vector-borne siRNA | Gu | |
| shRNA via VLPs | Bousarghin | |
| Immune system | Prophylactic vaccines containing VLPs (neutralizing Abs against HPV-L1) | Markowitz |
| Therapeutic vaccines (inducing cytotoxic T lymphocytes ) | Berraondo |