| Literature DB >> 26420980 |
Xin Sun1, Wei Guo2, Jacson K Shen3, Henry J Mankin3, Francis J Hornicek3, Zhenfeng Duan3.
Abstract
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue malignancy in childhood and adolescence. The two major histological subtypes of RMS are alveolar RMS, driven by the fusion protein PAX3-FKHR or PAX7-FKHR, and embryonic RMS, which is usually genetically heterogeneous. The prognosis of RMS has improved in the past several decades due to multidisciplinary care. However, in recent years, the treatment of patients with metastatic or refractory RMS has reached a plateau. Thus, to improve the survival rate of RMS patients and their overall well-being, further understanding of the molecular and cellular biology of RMS and identification of novel therapeutic targets are imperative. In this review, we describe the most recent discoveries in the molecular and cellular biology of RMS, including alterations in oncogenic pathways, miRNA (miR), in vivo models, stem cells, and important signal transduction cascades implicated in the development and progression of RMS. Furthermore, we discuss novel potential targeted therapies that may improve the current treatment of RMS.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26420980 PMCID: PMC4569767 DOI: 10.1155/2015/232010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Alterations of chromosome in RMS by CGH in recent 5 years.
| Materials | Gain | Amplification | Loss | Deletion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 RMS samples | 2p, 12q, 6p, 9q, 10q, 1p, 2q, 6q, 8q, 15q, 18q | 3p, 11p, 6p |
Li et al., 2009 [ | ||
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| 13 RMS cell lines | 1p21.3–13.2, 1q12, 6q26–27, 7q21.3–31.1, 1q41, 2p24.3, 8q24.12, 20q13.2, 20q13.32 | 2p24.3 (MYCN), 8p11.23–11.21 (FGFR1), 12q13.3 (CDK4), 19q12, 20q | 3p14.2–12.2, 4q27–32.3, 6p25.1–24.3, 9p24.3–24.1, 13q14.3 | Missiaglia et al., 2009 [ | |
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| 57 ARMS samples | 12q15, 2p24, 12q13–q14 | Barr et al., 2009 [ | |||
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| 128 primary RMS samples | 7, 8, 11, 20 | 2p24.1 (MYCN), 8p11.2–p11.1 (FGFR1), 12q13.3–14.1 (CDK4), MDM2 (12q14.3–q15) | Williamson et al., 2010 [ | ||
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| 26 frozen primary ERMS samples | 8, 2, 11, 12, 13, 19, 20 | 2p21, 2q35, 2q14.2, 2q36.1, 5q35.2–q35.3, 11p11.2, 11q24.2, 12q13.3 | 6, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 18 | 1p36.23, 1q32.1, 3p14.2, 4q35.1–35.2, 9p21.3, 17q11.2, 22q13.31 | Paulson et al., 2011 [ |
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| 39 RMS samples | 12q13.3, 12q13.3–q14.1, 12q14.1, 17q25.1 | 2q13.12, 12q13.3, 12q13.3–q14.1 | 9p12–p11.2, 10q11.21–q11.22, 14q32.33, 16p11.2, 22q11.1 | 1p21.1, 2q14.1, 5q13.2, 9p12, 9q12 |
Liu et al., 2014 [ |
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| RMS cells derived from refractory RMS | NACA, HSD17B6, SDR9C7, RDH16, GPR182, ZBTB39, TAC3, MYO1A, NAB2, STAT6, LRP1 | Park et al., 2014 [ | |||
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| 20 RMS samples of Chinese patients | 12q24.31, 17q25.1, 1q21.1, 7q11.23, 12q13.3–q14.1 | 9p13.3, 12q13.3–q14.1, 12q15, 16p13.11 | 5q13.2, 15q11.2, 14q32.33 (IGHG, IGHM) | 1p36.33, 1p13.1, 2q11.1, 5q13.2, 8p23.1, 9p24.3, 16p11.2 | Liu et al., 2014 [ |
Figure 1The chromosomal rearrangements in ARMS. 80% of ARMS classified as translocation-positive ARMS carry characteristic chromosomal translocations demonstrated as t(2;13)(q35;q14), t(1;13)(p36;q14), and (2;2)(q35;p23). In (a) and (b), the translocations fuse the FKHR (a member of the forkhead/HNF-3 transcription factor family) locus on chromosome 13 to either PAX3 on chromosome 2 or PAX7 on chromosome 1. In (c), the translocation generated a fusion protein composed of PAX3 and the nuclear receptor coactivator NCOA1, having similar transactivation properties as PAX3/FKHR.
The histological types of rhabdomyosarcoma.
| Histological type | Predilection population | Predilection site | Risk category | Genetic change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ERMS | Infants or children under 10 years old | Head and neck region | Intermediate | LOH at chromosome 11p15.5 |
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| ARMS | Adolescents and young adults | Deep tissue of extremity | High | t(2;13)(q35;q14); t(1;13)(p36;q14) |
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| PRMS | Adult males | Throughout the body | High | JUN (1p31), MYC (8q24), CCND1 (11q13), INT2 (11q13.3), MDM2 (12q14.3–q15) |
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| SRMS | In the first decade of life with a second mode centered around the fifth decade | The extremities, head, and neck | Superior | SRF-NCOA2; MYOD1 mutation |
ERMS: embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma.
ARMS: alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.
PRMS: pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma.
SRMS: spindle cell/sclerosing rhabdomyosarcoma.
Figure 2Myogenic pathways in the tumorigenesis of RMS. In aberrant neoplastic condition, progenitor cells residing in muscle result in aberrant pathways, which lead to malignant transformation and fail to differentiate, proliferate uncontrollably, and form RMS. Sharp arrows (→) indicate upregulation/activation and blunt arrows (⊥) indicate downregulation/inhibition.
Studies identifying stem cells in RMS.
| Marker/substrate | Source | Stem cell gene | Functional characterization | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD133 | Orthotopic xenograft model | OCT4, NANOG, c-MYC, PAX3, and SOX2 | Correlating with poor overall survival | Walter et al., 2011 [ |
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| PAX-FKHR | Bone marrow of C57BL/6 mice | Myf5, MEF2, MyoD, and myogenin | Determining the molecular, myogenic, and histologic phenotype of ARMS | Ren et al., 2008 [ |
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| V-ATPase | RD cell line | NANOG and OCT3/4 | Driving mechanisms of a reduced sensitivity to anticancer drugs and activities related to invasion and metastasis | Salerno et al., 2014 [ |
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| Surv.m-CRAs | KYM-1 cell line (FGFR3-positive) | FGFR3 | Therapeutic effectiveness against all cell populations and increased effectiveness against CSCs | Tanoue et al., 2014 [ |
Figure 3Genetic analyses of RMS have pinpointed several common alterations, including inactivation of a master regulator of p53 and Rb pathways, CDKN2A/B, and activation of FGFR4, RAS, and Hedgehog (Hh) signaling. The modifications of these pathways influence oncogenesis and metastatic potential.
Figure 4The DNA repair systems in RMS. There are two pathways repairing the DNA lesions, directly without affecting DNA structure and indirectly by DNA phosphodiester backbone cleavage. The modifications in DNA repair enzymes expression or activity lead to resistance to chemotherapy and radiation in RMS tumor cells. MGMT, O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase; BER, base excision repair; NER, nucleotide excision repair; HR, homologous recombination; NHEJ, nonhomologous end-joining; MMEJ, microhomology-mediated end-joining.
MicroRNAs involved in myogenesis and RMS development.
| miRNA | Expression | Target | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-1 and miR-133a | Downregulation | MYH9 | Myogenic miRNA, inhibit differentiation and promote proliferation in myogenesis, cytostatic | Rao et al., 2010 [ |
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| miR-206 | Downregulation | cMET | Promote differentiation and proliferation in myogenesis | Yan et al., 2009 [ |
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| miR-29 | Downregulation | HADC4, YY1, EZH2 | Promote stabilization of RMS phenotype | Marchesi et al., 2014 [ |
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| miR-450-5p | Downregulation | ENOX, PAX9 | Promote differentiation and progression |
Sun et al., 2014 [ |
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| miR-203 | Downregulation | JAK, STAT, Notch | Inhibit differentiation and proliferation in myogenesis, tumor suppressor | Diao et al., 2014 [ |
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| miR-214 | Downregulation | N-Ras | Inhibit tumor cell growth and induce myogenic differentiation and apoptosis | Huang et al., 2014 [ |
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| miR-183 | Upregulation | EGR1 | Promote migration and metastasis | Sarver et al., 2010 [ |
In vivo animal models of RMS.
| Model | Target | Model origin | Reference | |
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| Inactivation | Expression | |||
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| PAX-FKHR | Bipartite Gal4-UAS expression system | Galindo et al., 2006 [ | |
| PAX7-FOXO1 | rols | Chromosomal deletion, Df(3L)vin5 | Avirneni-Vadlamudi et al., 2012 [ | |
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| Zebrafish | rag2 promoter | c-Myc | kRASG12D |
Chen and Langenau, 2011 [ |
| MAPK/ERK and AKT/S6K1 | PD98059, TPCK | Tg(hsp70-HRASG12V) | Le et al., 2012 [ | |
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| Mouse | Sufu | N-myc, Sfrp1, Ptch2, and cyclin D1 | Sufu+/− | Lee et al., 2007 [ |
| Ink4a/Arf and Trp53 | Pax3:FKHR | Pax3P3Fp/wt | Keller et al., 2004 [ | |
| Wnt/ | Wnt2 | p53−/−/c-fos−/− | Singh et al., 2010 [ | |