| Literature DB >> 27014069 |
Hassan Rammal1, Charles Saby1, Kevin Magnien1, Laurence Van-Gulick1, Roselyne Garnotel1, Emilie Buache1, Hassan El Btaouri1, Pierre Jeannesson1, Hamid Morjani1.
Abstract
The extracellular matrix critically controls cancer cell behavior by inducing several signaling pathways through cell membrane receptors. Besides conferring structural properties to tissues around the tumor, the extracellular matrix is able to regulate cell proliferation, survival, migration, and invasion. Among these receptors, the integrins family constitutes a major class of receptors that mediate cell interactions with extracellular matrix components. Twenty years ago, a new class of extracellular matrix receptors has been discovered. These tyrosine kinase receptors are the two discoidin domain receptors DDR1 and DDR2. DDR1 was first identified in the Dictyostelium discoideum and was shown to mediate cell aggregation. DDR2 shares highly conserved sequences with DDR1. Both receptors are activated upon binding to collagen, one of the most abundant proteins in extracellular matrix. While DDR2 can only be activated by fibrillar collagen, particularly types I and III, DDR1 is mostly activated by type I and IV collagens. In contrast with classical growth factor tyrosine kinase receptors which display a rapid and transient activation, DDR1 and DDR2 are unique in that they exhibit delayed and sustained receptor phosphorylation upon binding to collagen. Recent studies have reported differential expression and mutations of DDR1 and DDR2 in several cancer types and indicate clearly that these receptors have to be taken into account as new players in the different aspects of tumor progression, from non-malignant to highly malignant and invasive stages. This review will discuss the current knowledge on the role of DDR1 and DDR2 in malignant transformation, cell proliferation, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, migratory, and invasive processes, and finally the modulation of the response to chemotherapy. These new insights suggest that DDR1 and DDR2 are new potential targets in cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell signaling; collagen; discoidin domain receptors; extracellular matrix; targeted therapy; tyrosine kinase
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014069 PMCID: PMC4789497 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 2DDRs reported mutations in cancer. Domain distribution of somatic mutations of mutated DDR1 and DDR2 identified in lung cancer (red) and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (green) samples. Blue spots represent mutation with undefined role. Gray spot represent a mutation that promotes tumor cell proliferation and invasion. Pink spots represent a mutation that activates constitutively DDRs. Black spots represent mutations responsible for an increased sensitivity to dasatinib. Orange spot represents the “gatekeeper mutation,” responsible for the resistance of tumor cells to dasatinib. DS, discoidin domain; DS-like, discoidin-like domain; EJXM, extracellular juxtamembrane region; TM, transmembrane segment; IJXM, intracellular juxtamembrane region; KD, kinase domain.
Non-exhaustive list of reported DDRs .
| Positive regulator | Proliferation /survival | - Human glioma: U251, GI-1 and T98G (Yamanaka et al., | - Human squamous cell lung cancer: H2286 and HCC366 (Hammerman et al., |
| EMT | - Human hepatoma: HAK-1A and HAK-1B (Maeyama et al., | - Human lung carcinoma: A549 (Walsh et al., | |
| Migration | - Human glioma: G140 (Ram et al., | - Human melanoma: A375 (Badiola et al., | |
| Invasion | - Human glioma: G140 (Ram et al., | - Human prostate cancer: LNCaP and PC-3 (Yan et al., | |
| Negative regulator | Proliferation /survival | - Human breast cancer: MCF-7 and ZR-75-1 (Maquoi et al., | - Human melanoma: A2058 (Wall et al., |
| EMT | - Human breast cancer: Hs578T, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 (Koh et al., | NR | |
| Migration | - Human breast cancer: MCF-7 (Hansen et al., | - Murine colon carcinoma: MCA38 (Badiola et al., | |
| Invasion | NR | NR |
DDR, Discoidin domain receptor; EMT, Epithelial mesenchymal transition; NR, not reported.
Insights into DDRs contribution in cancer from .
| DDR1 | Human pancreatic adenocarcinoma | BXPC3 mouse tumor xenografts | shRNA-DDR1 silencing reduced the growth of tumor xenografts (~50% reduction compared to control) | Rudra-Ganguly et al., |
| Human colon carcinoma | HCT116 mouse tumor xenografts | shRNA-DDR1 silencing reduced the growth of tumor xenografts (~30% reduction compared to control) | Kim et al., | |
| Human breast cancer | Hs587T and MDA-MB-231 cells seeded on upper layer of Chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) | DDR1 overexpression in cells, induced a decreased invasion after 48 h of incubation | Koh et al., | |
| Human prostate cancer | Androgen independent-LNCaP and LNCaP prostate seeded on CAM | siRNA-DDR1 silencing in cells, induced a decreased invasion after 72 h of incubation | Shimada et al., | |
| DDR2 | Human squamous cell lung cancer (SCC) | NCI-H1703, NCI-H2286 or A549 cells athymic nude mouse xenografts | Dasatinib inhibited the proliferation of DDR2-mutated SCC cell lines (NCI-H1703, NCI-H2286 but not A549) in xenograft studies | Hammerman et al., |
| Human melanoma | Intrasplenic inoculation of A375R2-70 and A37R2-40 cells in C57BL/6J-Hfn11 nude mice | siRNA-DDR2 silencing in A375R2-70 and -40 reduced experimental liver metastasis development, by 60 and 75%, respectively | Badiola et al., | |
| Mouse breast cancer | 4T1-Luc/GFP cells implantation into the breast tissue of syngeneic Balb/cJ mice | DDR2 depletion led to a reduced metastatic capacity of 4T1-Luc cells | Zhang et al., | |
| Human breast cancer | MDA-MB-231-luc-D3H2LN cells transplantation into nude mice mammary fat pads | shRNA-DDR2 silencing improved mice lifespan and attenuated cells invasive capacity even 7 weeks after transplantation | Ren et al., | |
| Human prostate cancer | PC-3 cells intrabone injection in mice metastasis model | DDR2 depletion alleviated PC-3 cells induced osteolytic lesions, signature of bone destruction | Yan et al., | |
| Murine colon carcinoma | Intrasplenic MCA38 cells injection into DDR2-deficient mice | Increase in cancer cells hepatic colonization efficiency (hepatic occupied volume and number of metastatic foci per area unit) | Badiola et al., |
shRNA, Short hairpin ribonucleic acid; siRNA, small interfering ribonucleic acid.
An update on DDRs inhibitors: compound name, type and reported half maximal inhibitory concentration.
| Dasatinib (Day et al., | 0.5 ± 0.2 nM | 1.4 ± 0.3 nM | Kinase type I inhibitor |
| Nilotinib (Day et al., | 43 ± 3 nM | 55 ± 9 nM | Kinase type II inhibitor |
| Imatinib (Day et al., | 337 ± 56 nM | 675 ± 127 nM | Kinase type II inhibitor |
| Ponatinib (Canning et al., | 9 nM | 9 nM | Kinase type II inhibitor |
| Actinomycin D (Siddiqui et al., | NR | 9000 nM | Antibiotic |
| LCB 03-0110 (Sun et al., | 164 nM | 171 nM | Thienopyridine derivative |
| 7rh (Gao et al., | 6.8 nM | 101.4 nM | 3-(2-(pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-6-yl)-ethynyl)benzamides derivative |
| 7rj (Gao et al., | 7 nM | 93.6 nM | 3-(2-(pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-6-yl)-ethynyl)benzamides derivative |
| 2a (Richters et al., | 68 nM | 65 nM | Pyrazolo-urea containing compound |
| 4a (Richters et al., | 235 nM | 75 nM | Pyrazolo-urea containing compound |
| 4b (Richters et al., | 39 nM | 18 nM | Pyrazolo-urea containing compound |
| DDR1-IN-1 (Kim et al., | 105 nM | 413 nM | Kinase type II inhibitor |
| DDR1-IN-2 (Kim et al., | 47 nM | 145 nM | Kinase type II inhibitor |