| Literature DB >> 27289383 |
Hannah J Gaunt1, Naveen S Vasudev2, David J Beech3.
Abstract
Novel approaches towards cancer therapy are urgently needed. One approach might be to target ion channels mediating Ca2+ entry because of the critical roles played by Ca2+ in many cell types, including cancer cells. There are several types of these ion channels, but here we address those formed by assembly of transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) proteins, particularly those which involve two closely related members of the family: TRPC4 and TRPC5. We focus on these proteins because recent studies point to roles in important aspects of cancer: drug resistance, transmission of drug resistance through extracellular vesicles, tumour vascularisation, and evoked cancer cell death by the TRPC4/5 channel activator (-)-englerin A. We conclude that further research is both justified and necessary before these proteins can be considered as strong targets for anti-cancer cell drug discovery programmes. It is nevertheless already apparent that inhibitors of the channels would be unlikely to cause significant adverse effects, but, rather, have other effects which may be beneficial in the context of cancer and chemotherapy, potentially including suppression of innate fear, visceral pain and pathological cardiac remodelling.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Calcium ion; Cancer cell; Englerin A; Ewing’s sarcoma; Ion channel; Non-selective cationic channel; Renal cell carcinoma; Transient receptor potential canonical
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27289383 PMCID: PMC5045487 DOI: 10.1007/s00249-016-1142-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Biophys J ISSN: 0175-7571 Impact factor: 1.733
Fig. 1Discovery of (−)-englerin A (EA) as a novel potent and efficacious TRPC4/5 channel activator. a Chemical structure of EA (Akbulut et al. 2015). b–d Measurements of the free intracellular calcium ion (Ca2+) concentration shown as the change (Δ) in fura-2 fluorescence. b Concentration–response data for EA in HEK cells over-expressing TRPC4 (HEK-TRPC4) indicating the 50 % maximum effect (EC50) at 11.2 nM (Akbulut et al. 2015). c As for b except the cells were genetically modified HEK 293 cells induced to over-express TRPC5 (HEK-TRPC5). The fitted curve is a Hill equation indicating an EC50 of 7.59 nM (Akbulut et al. 2015). d Mean responses after 4 min exposure to vehicle, 1 µM EA, or 1 µM EA in the presence of 5 µM ML204 (Akbulut et al. 2015). e Whole-cell current–voltage relationship of membrane current from a single A498 cell during ramp changes in membrane voltage from −100 to +100 mV applied every 10 s. 100 nM EA or its vehicle were bath-applied (Akbulut et al. 2015). f As (e) except with genetically modified HEK 293 cells induced to over-express TRPC4 and transiently express TRPC1 (HEK C4 + C1) (Akbulut et al. 2015)
TRPC1/4/5 in cancer
| TRPC4 | TRPC5 | TRPC1 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Migration/proliferation of cancer cells | Ovarian carcinoma cell line proliferation (Zeng et al. | Ovarian carcinoma cell line proliferation (Zeng et al. | |
| Angiogenesis | Tube formation of endothelial cell lines in a Matrigel assay (Antigny et al. | Tube formation of endothelial cell lines in a Matrigel assay (Antigny et al. | Angiogenic sprouting in zebrafish (Yu et al. |
| Tube formation and proliferation of human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (Song et al. | Vascular repair; endothelial progenitor cell migration and proliferation (Kuang et al. | ||
| Retinal neovascularisation induced by VEGF (Song et al. | |||
| TRPC4 down-regulation in renal cell carcinoma enables the angiogenic switch (Veliceasa et al. | |||
| Multi-drug resistance | Overexpressed in drug-resistant breast cancer cells and is involved in adriamycin resistance (Ma et al. | Resistance of multi-drug-resistant breast cancer due to involvement in regulation of ABCC3 expression (Stewart et al. | |
| Role for TRPC5 in trafficking of extracellular vesicles from resistant to wild-type cells causing chemoresistance (Ma et al. | |||
| ABCB1 induction and drug resistance in colorectal carcinoma (Wang et al. | |||
| Cell death | TRPC4 channels are a target of (−)-englerin A (Akbulut et al. | TRPC5 channels are a target of (−)-englerin A (Akbulut et al. | TRPC1/4/5 channels are a target of (−)-englerin A (Akbulut et al. |
| (−)-Englerin A-activated TRPC4 channels are involved in its mechanism of killing renal cell carcinoma cells (Carson et al. |
The roles of TRPC4/5/1 in cancer cell migration and proliferation, angiogenesis, multi-drug resistance and cell death
Fig. 2Simplified overview of TRPC4/5 channels as potential therapeutic targets in cancer. a VEGF-activated TRPC1/4/5 channels allow non-selective cation entry. A modest rise in intracellular Ca2+ can lead to an increase in migration, proliferation and tubulogenesis of endothelial cells, leading to angiogenesis. b TRPC5 drives chemoresistance in breast cancer cells as it leads to up-regulation of p-glycoprotein (pgp) which acts to pump drugs from the cell. TRPC5 is expressed in extracellular vesicles (EVs), and a critical role of TRPC5-containing EVs is in the transfer of drug resistance to non-chemoresistant recipient cells. c (−)-Englerin A is a selective TRPC1/4/5 channel activator which causes influx of Ca2+ and Na+ into certain types of cancer cell, which then causes cell death