| Literature DB >> 26284195 |
Simone Patergnani1, Sonia Missiroli1, Saverio Marchi1, Carlotta Giorgi1.
Abstract
Autophagy is a tightly regulated catabolic pathway that terminates in the lysosomal compartment after the formation of a cytoplasmic vacuole that engulfs macromolecules and organelles. Notably, autophagy is associated with several human pathophysiological conditions, playing either a cytoprotective or cytopathic role. Many studies have investigated the role of autophagy in cancer. However, whether autophagy suppresses tumorigenesis or provides cancer cells with a rescue mechanism under unfavorable conditions remains unclear. Mitochondria-associated membranes (MAMs) are juxtaposed between the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria and have been identified as critical hubs in the regulation of apoptosis and tumor growth. One key function of MAMs is to provide asylum to a number of proteins with tumor suppressor and oncogenic properties. Accordingly, mechanistic studies during tumor progression suggest a strong involvement of these proteins at various steps of the autophagic process. This paper discusses the present state of our knowledge about the intimate molecular networks between MAMs and autophagy in cancer cells and addresses how these networks might be manipulated to improve anticancer therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: MAM; apoptosis; autophagy; calcium; cancer; cell death
Year: 2015 PMID: 26284195 PMCID: PMC4515599 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Functions of autophagy in cancer.
| Autophagy in tumor promotion | Autophagy in tumor suppression |
|---|---|
| Tumor cells use autophagy to adapt in a hypoxic environment | Contributes to cancer cells death at early stage of several cancer types |
| Autophagy is activated as a protective mechanism to mediate the acquired resistance phenotype of some cancer cells during chemotherapy | Autophagy suppresses tumor initiation limiting the accumulation of damaged proteins and organelles such as mitochondria and peroxisomes |
| Autophagy as a mechanism that permits obtaining both ATP and metabolic intermediates | Autophagy may protect against tumor initiation and development by favoring cellular differentiation, increasing protein catabolism, or promoting autophagic cell death |
MAM cofactors regulating autophagic machinery.
| Protein | Regulation of autophagy | Potential molecular targets |
|---|---|---|
| AKT | Negative | BECLIN-1/MTOR |
| BCL-2 | Negative | BECLIN-1/AMBRA-1 |
| BCL-XL | Negative | BECLIN-1 |
| AMBRA-1 | Negative | BCL-2 family members |
| PML | Unknown | Regulate autophagy via ER-mitochondria cross-talk (hypothetical) |
| PKCβ/p66Shc | Negative | PKCβ-dependent mitochondrial translocation of p66Shc |
| p53 | Negative | Regulate autophagy via ER-mitochondria cross-talk (hypothetical) |
| MFN-1/MFN-2 | Positive | PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy |
| DRP1 | Positive | PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy |
| HRAS | Dual role | Class I PI3K/AKT/MTOR pathway (negative), Rac1/MKK7/JNK pathway (positive) |
| MTOR | Negative | Class I PI3K, AKT, PINK1 |
| PP2A | Positive | MTOR, PML (hypothetical) |
Some of the clinical trials combining the autophagy inhibitor HCQ.
| Cancer type | Drugs combination | Phase trial |
|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | HCQ + lixabepilone | I/II |
| Pancreatic cancer | HCQ + gemcitabine | I/II |
| Pancreatic cancer | HCQ + capecitabine + photon radiation | II |
| Glioblastoma | HCQ + temozolomide | I/II |
| Non-small-cell lung cancer | HCQ + cisplatin etoposide | I/II |
| Non-small-cell lung cancer | HCQ + paclitaxel and carboplatin | II |
| Renal cell carcinoma | HCQ + high dose interleukin-2 and other systemic therapies | I |
| Metastatic colorectal cancer | HCQ + capecitabine, oxaliplatin, and bevacizumab | II |
| Colorectal cancer | HCQ + FOLFOX/bevacizumab | I/II |
| Ovarian cancer | HCQ + sorafenib | I |
| Multiple myeloma | HCQ + bortezomib | I/II |
| Chronic myeloid leukemia | HCQ + imatinib | II |
Figure 1Summary of the key functions of the ER-MAMs resident proteins. (A) Several proteins reside in MAMs compartment and regulate the juxtaposition between ER and mitochondria, including grp75, Ero1α, PERK, and MFN-1/2. At the same time, other MAM resident proteins control the cell survival by governing apoptosis (B) and autophagy (C). For example, it has been reported that PML, IP3R3, and AKT mutually interact to allow the correct Ca2+-movement between ER and mitochondria, an essential proapoptotic signal. Interestingly, the maintenance of this interorganelle Ca2+-communication is also important for the autophagic process. Of relevance, reductions of mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation may trigger autophagy. In parallel, most of MAM proteins also govern the autophagic machinery. Of relevance, AKT and MTOR regulate negatively autophagic process. The same work is executed by the molecular axis composed by p66Shc and PKCβ. It is widely accepted that autophagy is strictly linked to several human diseases, in particular cancer. Think about a possible link between autophagy, cancer, and MAMs is not so difficult. Several findings may suggest this. For example, the corrected maintenance of MAMs integrity by MFN-1/-2 and DRP1 is also crucial for autophagosome formation and tumor cell growth. (D) The autophagic regulator AMBRA-1 has been found to interact with both the oncogene BCL-2 and the tumor suppressor BECLIN-1. Again, ER stress mediated by UPR a potent autophagic activator: at the same time ER stress is a critical signal capable to drive cell death. Also, the activity of the main proteins involved in Ca2+ release and reuptake at MAM levels, SERCA and IP3R3, is reported to be involved in apoptosis and tumorigenesis. Interestingly, the functioning of these channels is intimately regulated by several oncogenes (like AKT) and tumor suppressor (such as p53), which are also involved in regulation of autophagy. Abbreviations: grp75, glucose-regulated protein 75; IP3R3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor type 3; MFN-1/-2, mitofusin-1/-2; Hk2, Hexokinase 2; PACS, phosphofurin acidic cluster sorting protein; VDAC, voltage-dependent anion-selective channel; Ca2+, calcium; PGC-1α, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; p66Shc, 66 kDa proto-oncogene Src homologous-collagen homolog; PKCβ, protein kinase C beta; PP2a, protein phosphatase 2; AKT, protein kinase B; SERCA, sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase; MTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; PML, promyelocytic leukemia; UPR, unfolded protein response; PINK1, PTEN-induced putative kinase 1; PERK, protein kinase-like ER kinase; DRP1, dynamin-related protein; Ero1a, ER oxidoreductase 1 alpha; IP3R3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor type 3; AMBRA-1, Beclin1-regulated autophagy; BCL-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; BECLIN-1, BCL-2-interacting protein;, AMPK, 5′ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase).
Figure 2Modulation of the activity of ER-MAMs protein may represent a novel therapeutical strategy against carcinogenesis. MTOR, the main regulator of autophagic process, was found to modulate MAMs structure and activities. In addition, other PI3K family members, like AKT and PTEN, are located at ER-MAMs sites and represent critical regulator of autophagy and MTOR activity. Of relevance, these PI3K family members may be modulated by rapamycin and class I PI3K inhibitors. Furthermore, since the interaction of AKT-PTEN axis with the tumor suppressor PML and the protein PP2A at MAMs level is well described, it is possible to hypothesize a pharmacological intervention at this level to modulate the autophagic process during tumorigenesis. Also, the most studied tumor suppressor, p53, recently found to be located at ER-MAMs sites, was found to regulate autophagy. It is so clear that chemotherapic agents activating p53 may exert their antitumor activities at ER-mitochondria contact sites in an autophagy-dependent manner. Another critical regulator of autophagy, AMPK, was recently found to destabilize the correct juxtaposition between ER and mitochondria. Interestingly, the pharmacological AMPK-activator Metformin is found to regulate the activity of PKCβ. It is easy to think that metformin may interfere with the recent discovered negative modulator of autophagy, the p66Shc–PKCβ axis. Likewise, the potent autophagic regulator AMBRA-1 is found to be a potent controller of BCL-2 family member activities. Interestingly, the employment of BH3-mimetics is often used in chemotherapy, suggesting a possible role of AMBRA-1 during therapeutical approaches against cancer. Finally, the most important proteins involved in the mitophagic process, PINK1 and Parkin interact and regulate the activity of different ER-MAMs resident protein, thus suggesting the possibility of intercede to the activity of PINK-1-Parkin to develop novel antitumor approaches. Abbreviations: MFN-1/-2, mitofusin-1/-2; Hk2, hexokinase 2; PACS, phosphofurin acidic cluster sorting protein; PGC-1α, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; p66Shc, 66 kDa proto-oncogene Src homologous-collagen homolog; PKCβ, protein kinase C beta; PP2a, protein phosphatase 2; AKT, protein kinase B; SERCA, sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase; MTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; PML, promyelocytic leukemia; PINK1, PTEN-induced putative kinase 1; DRP1, dynamin-related protein; AMPK, 5′ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; PI3K, phosphoinositide-3-kinase; AMBRA-1, Beclin1-regulated autophagy; BCL-2, B-cell lymphoma 2.