| Literature DB >> 27411336 |
Jayu Jen1, Yi-Ching Wang2,3.
Abstract
Zinc finger proteins are the largest transcription factor family in human genome. The diverse combinations and functions of zinc finger motifs make zinc finger proteins versatile in biological processes, including development, differentiation, metabolism and autophagy. Over the last few decades, increasing evidence reveals the potential roles of zinc finger proteins in cancer progression. However, the underlying mechanisms of zinc finger proteins in cancer progression vary in different cancer types and even in the same cancer type under different types of stress. Here, we discuss general mechanisms of zinc finger proteins in transcription regulation and summarize recent studies on zinc finger proteins in cancer progression. In this review, we also emphasize the importance of further investigations in elucidating the underlying mechanisms of zinc finger proteins in cancer progression.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer progression; Transcription factor; Zinc finger protein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27411336 PMCID: PMC4944467 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-016-0269-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Summary of differential roles of ZNF proteins in cancer progression
| ZNFs | Aliases | Role | Cancer models | Target genes | Mechanism in tumorigenesis | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZKSCAN3 | ZNF306, ZNF309 | Oncogene | Colorectal cancer | Integrin β4 ↑, VEGF ↑ | Promotes cancer cell growth, migration, angiogenesis, proteolysis | [ |
| Multiple myeloma | Cyclin D2 ↑ | Enhances cell proliferation | [ | |||
| Prostate cancer | - | Promotes cell migration | [ | |||
| Cervical, colon, ovarian cancer, neuroblastoma | MAP1LC3B ↓, WIPI2 ↓ | Suppresses autophagy and lysosome biogenesis | [ | |||
| ZNF322A | ZNF388, ZNF489 | Oncogene | Lung cancer | - | Chromosome locus 6p22.1 is amplified | [ |
| ADD1 ↑, CCND1 ↑, p53 ↓ | Promotes cell growth, migration and invasion | [ | ||||
| ZNF304 | - | Oncogene | Colorectal | p14ARF ↓, p15INK4B ↓, p16INK4A ↓ | Suppresses tumor suppressor genes through recruiting a co-repressor complex, including DNMT1 | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | Integrin β1 ↑ | Activates Src/focal adhesion kinase and paxillin and therefore prevents anoikis | [ | |||
| ZNF139 | ZKSCAN1, ZNF36, ZSCAN33, KOX18 | Oncogene | Gastric cancer | - | Serves an independent prognostic factor for gastric cancer patients | [ |
| Survivin ↑, x-IAP ↑, Bcl2 ↑, Caspase-3 ↓, Bax ↓ | Promotes cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis | [ | ||||
| MMP-2 ↑, MMP-9 ↑, ICAM-1 ↑, TIMP-1 ↓ | Promotes cell migration and invasion | [ | ||||
| MDR-1/P-gp ↑, MRP1 ↑, Bcl-2 ↑, Bax ↓ | Contributes to multi-drug resistance | [ | ||||
| ZFX | ZNF926 | Oncogene | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Nanog ↑, SOX2 ↑ | Confers self-renewal properties and chemoresistance | [ |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | E-cadherin ↓ | May be involved in EMT | [ | |||
| Glioma, lung, oral, breast cancer | - | Promotes cell proliferation and survival | [ | |||
| Gastric cancer | - | Promotes cell growth through up-regulating ERK-MAPK pathway | [ | |||
| Gallbladder cancer | - | Promotes proliferation, migration and invasion potentially through activation of PI3K/AKT pathway | [ | |||
| Glioblastoma | c-Myc ↑ | Promotes glioma stem cell maintenance | [ | |||
| ZEB1 | ZFHX1A, DELTAEF1 | Oncogene | Breast cancer | ESRP2 ↓ | Promotes TGF-β-induced EMT | [ |
| Glioma | - | SHP-2 up-regulates ZEB1 expression to mediate EMT, invasion and growth | [ | |||
| Cervix, breast cancer, osteosarcoma, adrenal carcinoma | E-cadherin ↓ | Down-regulates E-cadherin and cell polarity factors by recruiting co-repressor CtBP or BRG1 | [ | |||
| Cervix, colorectal cancer | - | Activates genes involved in TGF-β/BMP signaling by recruiting p300 and P/CAF | [ | |||
| Lung cancer | E-cadhein ↑, ST14 ↑, Vimentin ↑ | Confers EMT-related acquired resistance to EGFR-TKI | [ | |||
| Breast cancer | VEGFA ↑ | Promotes angiogenesis | [ | |||
| ZNF545 | ZFP82 | TSG | Nasopharyngeal, esophageal, lung, gastric, colon, breast cancer | - | Induces cell apoptosis by repressing ribosome biogenesis and NF-kB and AP-1 signaling | [ |
| ZNF331 | ZNF361, ZNF463 | TSG | Gastric cancer | DSTN ↓, EIF5A ↓, GARS ↓, DDX5 ↓, STAM ↓, UQCRFS1 ↓, SET ↓, ACTR3 ↓ | Inhibits cell growth, migration and invasion | [ |
| Gastrointestinal, esophageal cancer | - | Promoter hypermethylation is found in various cancer types | [ | |||
| ZNF24 | ZNF191, Kox17 | TSG | Breast cancer | VEGF ↓ | Inhibits angiogenesis | [ |
| Gastric cancer | - | miR940 promotes cancer migration and invasion by targeting ZNF24 | [ | |||
| ZNF668 | - | TSG | Breast cancer | - | Suppresses cell proliferation by promoting MDM2 autoubiquitination and therefore p53 stabilization | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | - | Involved in DNA repair by regulating chromatin relaxation and recruiting repair proteins to DNA lesions | [ | |||
| ZHX1 | - | TSG | Gastric cancer | - | miR-199a-3p promotes cell proliferation and suppresses apoptosis by targeting to ZHX1 | [ |
| CCND1 ↓, CCNE ↓, Bcl2 ↓, Bax ↑, cleaved Caspase-3 ↑ | Induce G1/S arrest and apoptosis | [ | ||||
| ZNF395 | PBF, HDBP2 | Oncogene | Ewing’s sarcoma, osteosarcoma, renal cell carcinoma | - | Overexpressed in various cancers | [ |
| Glioblastoma | - | Induced under hypoxia stress | [ | |||
| Skin and cervix cancer, glioblastoma | IFIT1/ISG56 ↑, IFI44 ↑, IFI16 ↑ | Supports inflammation and cancer progression | [ | |||
| TSG | Liver cancer | - | miR-525-3p promotes cell migration and invasion by targeting ZNF395 | [ | ||
| Kaiso | ZNF348, ZBTB33 | TSG | Breast and colon cancer | CCND1 ↓ | Suppresses cell proliferation | [ |
| Oncogene | Breast cancer | Vimentin ↑, Slug ↑, ZEB1 ↑ | Involved in TGF-β-mediated metastasis | [ | ||
| Prostate cancer | miR-31 ↓ | Promotes cell migration and invasion | [ | |||
| Breast and colorectal cancer | HIF-1α ↓ | - | [ |
-, target not-determined
Fig. 1Various regulations of ZNF proteins’ functions in cancer progression. The versatile roles of ZNF proteins in cancer progression can be regulated at different levels. Differential expression of ZNF proteins in different cancer types can be regulated by 1) cancer-related miRNAs, including miR-199a-3p, miR-525-3p, miR-940 and miR-31, or 2) different environmental stimuli, which activate signaling cascades and therefore fine-tune ZNF protein functions through various of PTMs, including phosphorylation (P) and acetylation (Ac). 3) ZNF proteins at different protein domains or with various PTMs recruit different interacting proteins namely X, including transcription co-activators/co-repressors, chromatin modifiers and other transcription factors, to activate or suppress downstream genes. 4) ZNF proteins show diverse sequence-specific DNA binding abilities due to different combinations of zinc finger motifs shown as boxes