| Literature DB >> 26617517 |
Maryam Zamanian-Daryoush1, Joseph A DiDonato1.
Abstract
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) and apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), the predominant protein in plasma HDL, have long been the focus of intense studies in the field of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. ApoA-I, in large part, is responsible for HDL assembly and its main atheroprotective function, that of shuttling excess cholesterol from peripheral tissues to the liver for excretion (reverse cholesterol transport). Recently, a protective role for HDL in cancer was suggested from several large clinical studies where an inverse relationship between plasma HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels and risk of developing cancer was noted. This notion has now been tested and found to be supported in mouse tumor studies, where increasing levels of apoA-I/HDL were discovered to protect against tumor development and provision of human apoA-I was therapeutic against established tumors. This mini-review discusses the emerging role of apoA-I in tumor biology and its potential as cancer therapeutic.Entities:
Keywords: HDL; apoA-I; cancer; cancer therapeutic; cholesterol homeostasis; macrophage; peptide mimetics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26617517 PMCID: PMC4642354 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Clinical studies investigating role of apoA-I/HDL in cancer.
| Cancer type | Clinical Study Objective | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broad variety | Examined the relationship between serum high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) and risk of overall and site-specific cancers among 29,093 Finnish male smokers in the Alpha-Tocopherol Beta-Carotene (ATBC) study cohort | Inverse association between HDL-C levels and the risk of cancer of the lung, prostate, liver, and hematopoietic system | |
| Broad variety | Analysis of 24 randomized controlled trials of lipid- altering therapy (145,743 persons) to correlate baseline and on-treatment HDL-C levels to risk of developing cancer (2.7–5.2 years follow up; 625,477 person-years) | For every 10 mg/dL increase in HDL-C, 36 % lower risk of developing cancer | |
| Ovarian | ProteinChip biomarker System and Mass spectrometry-based proteomic profiling (SELDI-TOF-MS) to identify disease associated biomarkers in serum samples from patients with ovarian cancer (OC), benign tumors, and healthy donors (109 OC, 19 benign tumors, and 56 healthy controls) | Three panels of proteins for: (i) early diagnosis of neoplasia (benign or malignant) and (ii) distinguishing benign from malignant | |
| Ovarian/breast/colon/prostate | ProteinChip biomarker System and Mass spectrometry- based proteomic profiling (SELDI-TOF-MS) and immunoassays to identify and validate biomarkers in serum samples from patients with early stage OC as compared with healthy individuals and other cancers (195 OC, 166 benign tumors, 142 healthy controls for initial screening followed by 41 OC, 20 each breast, colon, and prostate cancers with 41 healthy controls for validation by immunoassays) | Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I; down-regulated in OC), truncated transthyretin (TT; down-regulated in OC), and a cleavage fragment of inter-α-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain H4 (up-regulated in OC) identified as biomarkers for OC | |
| Ovarian | Use of LC-MS/MS followed by immunoassays to identify 5 serum protein biomarkers previously reported ( | ApoA-I (down-regulated), TT (down-regulated), transferrin (down-regulated), and hemoglobin (up-regulated) identified as biomarkers for OC | |
| Ovarian | Independent evaluation of ApoA-I as biomarker for OC in 182 patient (42 OC, 65 benign tumors, and 76 with digestive diseases) sera collected at Mayo Clinic (1980–1989) | ApoA-I and TT were confirmed as biomarkers for OC with their expression reduced in disease | |
| Ovarian | Pre-surgery blood samples (41 early stage (I/II), 51 late stage (III/IV), 40 benign disease, and 99 healthy controls) analyzed by proteomics for seven previously identified biomarkers | ApoA-I as well as TT, and connective tissue activating protein III (CTAPIII), were confirmed as a panel of biomarker together with CA125 with increased sensitivity for detection of early stage OC | |
| Ovarian | Development of multiplexed bead-based immunoassay for detection of known serum biomarkers of cancer (118 OC, 84 benign ovarian disease, 61 healthy controls) | Combination of transthyretin, and apoA-I with CA125 improved sensitivity and specificity of OC diagnosis | |
| Ovarian and breast | Evaluation of apoA-I and GPX3 transcript level by qPCR in effusions, and solid tumors from patients with OC versus those with breast cancer (BC) as diagnostic tool to differentiate between these two cancers (101 OC and 20 BC effusions; 85 solid OC (43 primary, 42 metastasis)) | ApoA-I transcript in all anatomic sites was higher in OC compared with BC. Higher apoA-I mRNA levels in primary diagnosis pre-chemotherapy effusions were significantly related to better overall survival | |
| Pancreatic | ProteinChip biomarker System and Mass spectrometry- based proteomic profiling (SELDI-TOF-MS) to identify biomarkers in patient pre-surgery sera (96 cancer patients, 96 healthy controls) | ApoA-I, apoA-II and transthyretin identified as biomarkers with inverse correlation to pancreatic cancer | |
| Breast | Lipid profile analysis in fasting patient sera prior to diagnostic biopsies (50 malignant and 50 benign) | Lower apoA-I levels predict cancer recurrence | |
| Breast | Lipid profile analysis of pre-diagnostic sera from age-matched 200 (100 before age 50 and 100 at age 50 or older) case-control BC patients nested from an original cohort of 95,000 women to examine prospective association of plasma HDL-C and BC incidence | Low plasma HDL-C predicts risk of developing BC only in pre-menopausal women. Each 1 mg/dL increase in HDL-C is associated with a 4% reduction in risk of BC | |
| Breast | Assessed risk of BC associated with serum HDL-C in 38,823 Norwegian women with a median follow-up of 17.2 years | Low HDL-C, as part of the metabolic syndrome, is associated with increased postmenopausal BC risk | |
| Breast | Lipid profile analysis in fasting patient (Taiwanese) sera (150 cancer and 71 healthy controls) and association with BC risk | ApoA-I levels in serum inversely associated with BC | |
| Breast | Evaluate association of baseline HDL-C levels with cancer incidence using data from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study (ARIC) cohort with follow-up from 1987 through 2000 | Modest direct association of low HDL-C with risk of developing BC only in women who were premenopausal at baseline | |
| Breast | Multiple time point measurements of serum lipids and lipoproteins in a nested case-control (279 cases and 558 matched control subjects) study within a randomized long-term dietary intervention trial with 4,690 women for an average of 10 years to assess the association of serum lipids with the risk of cancer incidence based on menopausal status and use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) | HDL-C and apoA-I were positively associated with BC risk only when HRT was not used | |
| Nasopharyngeal | Retrospective analysis of 807 patients with metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) to assess prognostic value of baseline serum lipids in predicting overall survival | Higher values of HDL-C and apoA-I were associated with improved overall survival | |
| Endometrial | Examined the association of pre-diagnostic plasma levels of lipids, lipoproteins and other metabolic factors in developing cancer in a nested case-control (262 cases and 546 matched control subjects) study of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC; 520,000 participants from 10 western European countries) | HDL-C levels were inversely correlated with the risk of developing cancer | |
| Colorectal | Examined the association of pre-diagnostic plasma levels of lipids, lipoproteins and other metabolic factors in developing cancer in a nested case-control (1,238 cases, 1,238 matched control subjects) study of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC; 520,000 participants from 10 western European countries) | Higher pre-diagnostic HDL-C and apoA-I were statistically significantly inversely associated with risk of colon cancer, but not rectal cancer | |