| Literature DB >> 26491213 |
Lixia Guo1, Ting Zhang1, Ying Xiong2, Yanan Yang3.
Abstract
Lung cancer is one of the most common types of human malignancies and the leading cause of cancer-related death. Patients with surgically resectable early stage lung cancer are more likely curable, but currently only a small population of patients can be diagnosed at such a stage, partly due to our incomplete understanding of the biology of lung cancer and the lack of diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers. Recent studies have shown that NOTCH1 is a critical regulator of human carcinogenesis and has been implicated in multiple steps of cancer development and progression. Herein, we review recent findings about the role of NOTCH1 in lung cancer and discuss its potential usefulness as both a therapeutic target and a biomarker for lung cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26491213 PMCID: PMC4600509 DOI: 10.1155/2015/520590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Markers ISSN: 0278-0240 Impact factor: 3.434
Figure 1Schematic for NOTCH signaling in cancer cells. Upon the binding of NOTCH ligands (JAG1, JAG2, DLL1, DLL3, and DLL4) on adjacent cells, such as stromal cells or other cancer cells, NOTCH (NOTCH1–NOTCH4) on cancer cells can be activated through proteolytic cleavage (by ADAM proteinase and γ-secretase) to release its intracellular domain (NICD), which in turn translocates to the nucleus, where it forms transcription complexes with transcription cofactors (the blue shapes) to regulate cell-context-dependent transcription.
Key references for the role of NOTCH1 in lung cancer.
| References | Subtype | Key findings | Potential role of NOTCH1 |
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| [ | SCLC | NOTCH1 inhibited cell proliferation and neuroendocrine marker expression. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | SCLC | NOTCH1 induced growth inhibition and cell cycle arrest. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | SCLC | NOTCH1 inhibited EMT and invasion. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | NSCLC | Knockdown of NOTCH1 inhibited cell growth; NICD1 promoted cell growth in the presence of EGF. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Hypoxia-induced HIF1 | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Inactivation of NOTCH1 or its mediators in mouse models of NSCLC abrogated tumorigenesis. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Inactivation of the NOTCH ligand Jagged2 inhibited EMT and metastasis. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Galectin-1 increased Jagged2 and NOTCH1 to promote metastasis. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | ADAM10 activated NOTCH1 to promote invasion. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | NICD1 induced EMT and destroyed adherens junctions. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | NICD1 transcriptionally activated SOX9 to drive EMT and invasion. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Higher NOTCH1 correlated with disease progression, metastasis, and poorer prognosis. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | Gain-of-function NOTCH1 mutations are identified in a subset of patients; activated NOTCH1 activity correlated with poorer survival of NSCLC patients without p53 mutations. | Oncogenic |
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| [ | NSCLC | NICD1 inhibited cell and xenograft tumor growth. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | NSCLC | NOTCH1 mediated Z-Isochaihulactone-induced growth inhibition. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | NSCLC | Endothelial DLL4 activated tumor cell NOTCH1 to inhibit growth. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | NSCLC | NOTCH1 expression negatively correlated with metastasis and predicted better survival. | Tumor suppressive |
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| [ | NSCLC | NICD1 was only detected in a small proportion of patient tissues and had no prognostic value. | |
Figure 2Hypothetical role of NOTCH1 in EMT and metastasis. Elevated NOTCH1 activity in epithelial tumor cells may promote EMT through EMT-regulating pathways and transcription factors, such as SNAIL, SLUG, ZEB1, and SOX9. Tumor cells that have undergone EMT display mesenchymal morphology and acquire enhanced invasiveness and metastatic potential. Inhibition of NOTCH1 by NOTCH inhibitors, including γ-secretase inhibitors and NOTCH1 monoclonal antibodies (mAb), may inhibit or reverse EMT and may be useful for treating metastatic cancers.