| Literature DB >> 27072583 |
Sudeshna Goswami1, Neelam Sharma-Walia1.
Abstract
Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is a soluble decoy receptor for tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL). It belongs to the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily (TNFRSF). OPG was initially discovered to contribute to homeostasis of bone turnover due to its capability of binding to receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kB). However, apart from bone turnover, OPG plays important and diverse role(s) in many biological functions. Besides having anti-osteoclastic activity, OPG is thought to exert a protective anti-apoptotic action in OPG-expressing tumors by overcoming the physiologic mechanism of tumor surveillance exerted by TRAIL. Along with inhibiting TRAIL induced apoptosis, it can induce proliferation by binding to various cell surface receptors and thus turning on the canonical cell survival and proliferative pathways. OPG also induces angiogenesis, one of the hallmarks of cancer, thus facilitating tumor growth. Recently, the understanding of OPG and its different roles has been augmented substantially. This review is aimed at providing a very informative overview as to how OPG affects cancer progression especially breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: COX-2; FASN; NF-kB; PGE2; osteoprotegerin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27072583 PMCID: PMC5173171 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8658
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Molecular structure of OPG highlighting its different binding and functional domains
Figure 2Schematic diagram depicting the diverse signaling pathways that are triggered or modulated by OPG
OPG can bind to various cell surface receptors such as Syndecan-1, membranous RANKL, and αVβ5 integrin in order to trigger different cell survival pathways particularly, ERK, PI-3K/Akt pathway which results in expression of various cell survival favorable genes. Simultaneously, stable β-catenin of the canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway, which is turned on in the majority of cancer cells, translocate to nucleus and turns on OPG gene expression. The OPG gets secreted out of the cell in the microenvironment, and can exert its paracrine and autocrine effects. The released OPG can affect the nearby healthy cells thus driving them towards tumorigenesis. The released OPG can also exert autocrine effects on the cancer cells by binding to cell surface receptors. The binding of OPG turns on the vicious cell survival signaling in cancer cells thus favoring their growth, proliferation, survival, angiogenesis [6].
Comparison of copy number variations in breast cancer cell lines, inflammatory breast cancer tissue from patient, and HMEC sphere cultures grown for long time in the presence of OPG rich microenvironment
| Gene | SUM149PT | SUM1315M02 | Patient sample | HMEC sp w/500pg/ml rhOPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AKT1 (serine-threonine kinase) | ||||
| AURKA (Aurora-A kinase) | ||||
| CDK4 (cell cycle progression) | ||||
| EGFR (surface receptor) | ||||
| ERBB2 (RTK;oncogene) | ||||
| MYC (regulator of transcripton) | ||||
| PAK 1 (RhoGTPases) | ||||
| PTEN (tumor sup.) | ||||
| CDKN2A (CDK inhibitor) | ||||
| RB1 (tumor sup.) | ||||
| TOP2A |
Red check marks denote the remarkably high gene expression of AKT1, AURKA, CDK4, EGFR1, ERBB2, PAK1 and MYC copy number in the DNA prepared from sphere cultures of SUM149PT, SUM1315MO2, inflammatory breast cancer tissue from patients, and HMEC spheres cultured for long time in the presence of human recombinant OPG (500pg/ml). Green crosses depict the downregulation of tumor suppressors (RB1 and PTEN), cycle regulator CDKN2A, and DNA repair enzyme topoisomerase DNA II alpha TOP2A in SUM149PT, SUM1315MO2, inflammatory breast cancer tissue from patients, and HMEC spheres cultured for long time in the presence of human recombinant OPG (500pg/ml).
Figure 3Pie chart depicting the binding partners of OPG from mass spectrometry analysis
A. pull-down with anti-OPG antibody revealed a myriad of proteins involved in different cellular functions in inflammatory and aggressive breast cancer cells.