| Literature DB >> 25866791 |
Varsha P Brahmkhatri1, Chinmayi Prasanna1, Hanudatta S Atreya2.
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) are essential for growth and survival that suppress apoptosis and promote cell cycle progression, angiogenesis, and metastatic activities in various cancers. The IGFs actions are mediated through the IGF-1 receptor that is involved in cell transformation induced by tumour. These effects depend on the bioavailability of IGFs, which is regulated by IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs). We describe here the role of the IGF system in cancer, proposing new strategies targeting this system. We have attempted to expand the general viewpoint on IGF-1R, its inhibitors, potential limitations of IGF-1R, antibodies and tyrosine kinase inhibitors, and IGFBP actions. This review discusses the emerging view that blocking IGF via IGFBP is a better option than blocking IGF receptors. This can lead to the development of novel cancer therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25866791 PMCID: PMC4383470 DOI: 10.1155/2015/538019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1The IGF axis: circulating IGFs are protected from degradation by forming complex with IGFBPs. IGFs, apart from their local functioning in an autocrine or a paracrine manner, enter the bloodstream, where they exist as binary complexes with each IGFBP. In addition, ternary complex also exists when the binary complexes with IGFBP-3 or IGFBP-5 interact with the acid labile subunit (ALS). After dissociation of ternary complex, the binary complexes of IGFBP-IGF are removed from the circulation and cross the endothelium to reach the target tissues and to interact with cell surface receptors.
Figure 2Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) is a hormone, produced by the hypothalamus which stimulates the pituitary gland to produce GH. Somatostatin secreted by the cells of hypothalamus and also by the cells of stomach, intestine, and pancreas that inhibits GH production. When pituitary secretes GH into the bloodstream, it results in the production of IGF-1 in the liver. IGF-1 is the factor that actually causes the growth of bones and other tissues of the body. It also plays an important role in signalling the pituitary to reduce GH production.
IGF-1 transgenic mice with tissue-specific IGF-1 overexpression.
| Organs | IGF-1 action | Promoter | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brain | Increased brain size, characterized by increased neuron number. | M IGF-2 5′ flanking region | [ |
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| Bone | Increased trabecular bone. | Bovine osteocalcin | [ |
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| Heart | Increased myocyte proliferation. | r | [ |
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| Muscle: skeletal | Stimulates differentiation and myofibril hypertrophy. | Avian skeletal | [ |
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| Muscle: smooth | Smooth muscle hyperplasia in many flanking fragments organs/tissues. | r smooth muscle | [ |
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| Ovary | Increased testosterone and cyst. | m LH receptor | [ |
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| Prostate | Epithelial neoplasia. | Bovine keratin-5 | [ |
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| Thyroid | When the IGF-1R is also overexpressed, there is a decreased TSH requirement and goiter. | Bovine thyroglobulin | [ |
Figure 3IGF receptor signalling: IGF-1R is a tetramer of two identical α-subunits and two identical β-subunits. IGF-1R and IR can hybridize to form a heterodimer composed of one α-subunit and one β-subunit of each receptor. Formation of hybrid receptors is explained with different colour code scheme. IGF-IIR, the mannose-6-phosphate (M6P) receptor, has high affinity for binding the IGF-II ligand but is a nonsignalling receptor. The biological activities of the IGF ligands are mediated by IGF-IR, but the IGF-IIR is considered to function as a “sink” that controls the local bioavailability of IGF ligands for binding to the IGF-IR.
Human insulin-like growth factor binding proteins.
| IGFBPs | Mass (kDa) | Source of purification | Relative binding affinity for IGFs |
|---|---|---|---|
| IGFBP1 | 25.0 | Amniotic fluid, placenta | IGFI = IGFII |
| IGFBP-2 | 31.3 | BRL-3A and MDBK cells, human serum | IGFII > IGFI |
| IGFBP-3 | 28.7 | Plasma | IGFI = IGFII |
| IGFBP-4 | 25.9 | Human osteosarcomas, prostatic carcinoma, colon carcinoma, and glioblastoma | IGFI = IGFII |
| IGFBP-5 | 28.5 | C2 myoblasts conditioned media, human bone | IGFI = IGFII |
| IGFBP-6 | 22.8 | Cerebrospinal fluid, human serum | IGFII > IGFI |
Figure 4Amino acid sequence alignment of human IGFBP-1 to IGFBP-6. Alignment was performed using the ClustalW program. Small gaps were introduced to optimize alignment.
Consequences of inhibiting IGFBP activity and cancer.
| IGFBPs | Expression | Results of inhibiting IGFBP activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| IGFBP-1 | Liver | It can induce or inhibit the IGF actions in many types of cells. As an example of the inhibiting activity of IGFBP-1, it inhibited IGF-I-induced growth in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. | [ |
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| IGFBP-2 | Liver, adipocytes, reproductive system, and central nervous system | IGFBP-2 level changes were associated with the development of different types of cancer including breast and prostate cancer. In prostate cancer, high level of serum IGFBP-2 was associated with low grade prostate cancer. | [ |
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| IGFBP-3 | Circulating carrier protein, expressed in many tissues | IGFBP-3 plays important role in different types of human cancers. IGFBP-3 can induce apoptosis by increasing the ratio of proapoptotic to antiapoptotic proteins in breast cancer cells. | [ |
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| IGFBP-4 | Liver, bone tissue, and muscles | IGFBP-4 showed a strong inhibitory effect on IGF-1 by preventing the activation of the IGF-1R, when the IGFBP-4 is found in the tissue. Conversely, intravenous administration of IGFBP-4, in the presence of a protease, will promote cellular proliferation. | [ |
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| IGFBP-5 | Mammary glands | In breast cancer, IGFBP-5 induced apoptosis and inhibited cellular differentiation in an IGF-dependent manner. | [ |
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| IGFBP-6 | Epithelial layer of human bronchial organ | It can inhibit IGF-2 activity mediated through the IGF-1R, including proliferation, differentiation, migration, and survival in different cell lines. | [ |
Summary of IGFBP proteases and their proteolytic cleavage sites.
| Proteolytic cleavage sites | IGFBP protease | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| IGFBP-2 | ||
| Met166-Gly167, Lys168-Gly169, Tyr103-Gly104, Leu152-Ala153, Arg156-Glu157, Gln165-Met166, Thr205-Met206, Arg287-Met288 | Unknown protease in hemofiltrate | [ |
| Leu3-Phe4, Lys168-Gly169, Lys181-Leu182 | Unknown in milk | [ |
| Arg164-Gln165 | Human kallikrein-2 | [ |
| Leu152, Gly175-Leu176, Lys181-Leu182 | Matrix metalloproteinase-7 | [ |
| Gln165-Met166 | PAPP-A | [ |
| His165-Arg166 | Calpain | [ |
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| IGFBP-3 | ||
| Arg97-Ala98, Lys160-Val161 | Plasmin | [ |
| Arg95-Leu96, Lys160-Val16 | Plasmin | [ |
| Arg97-Ala98, Arg206-Gly207 | Thrombin | [ |
| Arg97-Ala98, Lys149-Lys150, Lys150-Gly151, Lys154-Asp155 | Serum | [ |
| Arg97-Ala98, Arg132-Val133, Tyr159-Lys160, Phe173-Ser174, Arg179-Glu180 | Seminal plasma PSA | [ |
| Arg97-Ala98, His131-Arg132, Tyr159-Lys160 | Urinary PSA | [ |
| Arg97-Ala98 | Cysteine protease from MCF-7 cells | [ |
| Tyr99-Leu100, Leu96-Arg97, Leu141-His142 | MMP-1, MMP-2 | [ |
| Tyr99-Leu100, Asn109-Ala110, Glu176-Ser177 | MMP-3 | [ |
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| IGFBP-4 | ||
| Lys120-His121 | Calcium-dependent serine protease from smooth muscle cells | [ |
| Met135-Lys136 | PAPP-A | [ |
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| IGFBP-5 | ||
| Arg138-Arg139 | Serine protease from smooth muscle cells | [ |
| Ser143-Lys144 (secondary cleavage site), Ser143-Lys144 | PAPP-A2 | [ |
| Gln142-Ser-143 | PAPPA | [ |
| Lys120-His121, Arg156-Ile157, Arg192-Ala193 | Thrombin | [ |
Figure 5Structures of C-terminal domains of IGFBP-1, IGFBP-2, and IGFBP-6 represented as CBP-1 (1ZT5), CBP-2 (2H7T), and CBP-6 (1RMJ), respectively.
Figure 6(a) 2D [15N-1H] HSQC spectrum of purified full-length hIGFBP-2 (1.0 mM; nondeuterated) recorded at a 1H resonance frequency of 800 MHz at 285 K. (b) TEM images of (hollow) nanotubular structures formed by the C-terminal fragment of human IGFBP-2.
Figure 7Various strategic approaches to targeting IGF-1R receptors. Small-molecule TKIs, inactivating anti-IGF-1R antibodies, reduction or elimination of IGF-1R, protein expression by blocking IGF-1R, transcription (with triple helix) or translation (antisense technology and siRNA), IGF-1R, and mutants lacking beta-subunits (dominant-negative receptors).
Few examples of small molecule TKIs (tyrosine kinase inhibitors) directed against IGF receptors.
| Small molecule inhibitor | Mode of action | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| NVP-AEW541 | Kinase inhibition | Antineoplastic, tumour regression and inhibition of metastasis | [ |
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| Picropodophyllin (PPP) | Against autophosphorylation at the substrate level | Inhibition and downregulation of IGF-1R | [ |
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| BMS-554417 | ATP-competitive, dual kinase inhibition | Antiproliferative activity | [ |
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| INSM-18 | Reversible | Inhibitor of transcription (blocking also cdc2, survivin, and VEGF) | [ |
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| OSI-906 | Reversible | Derived from compound-1, also known as PQIP | [ |
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| XL-228 (XL-2280) | Inhibits bcr-abl, scr, and IGF-1R | [ | |
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| BVP-51004 Biovitrum (Cyclolignan PPP) | Non-ATP-competitive | Causes IGF-1R downregulation, probably through the induction of ubiquitination. | [ |
Few examples of anti-IGF-RI monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) [223].
| Monoclonal antibody | Class | Clinical information |
|---|---|---|
| CP-751,871 | Fully human | Ewing's sarcoma family of tumours, breast cancer, single agent in metastatic CRC |
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| IMC-A12 | Fully human | Ewing's sarcoma family of tumours CRC and H&N cancer |
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| R1507 | Fully human | Pediatric patients and sarcomas. |
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| AMG-479 | Fully human mab | Ewing's sarcoma family of tumours, |
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| SCH-717454 | Fully human mab | Colorectal cancer (CRC) |
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| AVE-1642 | Humanized mab | Previously known as EM164 (ImmunoGen) |
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| MK-0646 | Fabre | Colorectal cancer (CRC) |
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| BIIB022 | Fully human | Devoid of Fc-effector function to eliminate potential Fc mediated toxicity to the normal vital organs. |
Figure 8Targeting IGFBPs, a novel strategy in cancer therapeutics. The cancer therapeutics targeting the IGF-signalling pathway focus on blocking IGF-1R, directly, and/or its downstream effect. Drawback of such approaches is the adverse side effects or toxicities due to its interference with the insulin pathway. The more efficacious alternatives, IGFBPs, as IGF-antagonist based cancer therapeutics also contribute to block the IGF-1R, mediated tumour progression. As IGFBPs do not bind insulin, they do not interfere with insulin-insulin receptor interactions.
Figure 9Natural product derived phytochemicals with anticancer activity perturbing IGF signalling pathways.
Natural products perturbing IGF signalling pathways.
| Active phytochemicals | Natural source | Mode of action | Molecular target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Curcumin [ |
| Antiproliferation, anticarcinogenesis, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and antiangiogenesis | IGF-1R |
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| Genistein [ | Soybeans and soy products, red clover ( | Antioxidant, antiproliferation, antiproliferation, anticarcinogenesis, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, antiangiogenesis, and anti-inflammation | IGF-1R |
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| Lycopene [ | Tomatoes, guava, rosehip, watermelon, papaya, apricot, and pink grapefruit; most abundant in red tomatoes | Antioxidant, antiproliferation (growth inhibition, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis), antiangiogenesis, anti-inflammation, and immunomodulator | IGFBP-3 |
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| Apigenin [ | Fruits and vegetables, including oranges, grapefruits, parsley, celery, onions, wheat sprouts, cereals of millet and wheat, and in some seasonings, such as coriander, marjoram, oregano, rosemary, tarragon, and chamomile tea | Inhibit cellular proliferation, suppress tumorigenesis and angiogenesis, and induce apoptosis | IGF axis and its intracellular signalling in prostate cancer |
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| Quercetin [ | Fruits, vegetables, leaves, and grains | Inhibits the proliferation and induces apoptosis of cancer cells | IGFIR |
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| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate [ | Green tea | Inhibits angiogenesis | Inhibitory effects on IGF-I-induced VEGF expression |
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| Resveratrol [ | Grapes (mainly in the skin), mulberries, peanuts, vines, and pines | Antioxidant, antiproliferation, anticarcinogenesis, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, antiangiogenesis, and anti-inflammation | Suppression of IGF-1R/Akt/Wnt signalling pathways |