| Literature DB >> 27965895 |
Deepshikha Mishra1, Sunita Singh2, Gopeshwar Narayan1.
Abstract
The human CD10 antigen is a single pass, type II transmembrane, 100 kD cell surface glycoprotein belonging to peptidase M13 family. Identified in common acute lymphoblastic leukemia as a cancer specific antigen, CD10 is a cell surface ectoenzyme widely expressed on different types of cells. Earlier, it was used only as a cell surface marker to identify and differentiate between haematological malignancies. Later, reported to be present in various malignancies, it is thought to play significant role in cancer development and progression. Regulated expression of CD10 is necessary for angiogenesis and so forth. However its expression level is found to be deregulated in different cancers. In some cancers, it acts as tumor suppressor and inhibits tumor progression whereas in others it has tumor promoting tendency. However, its role in tumorigenesis remains unclear. This review summarises structural features, functions, and probable role of CD10 in cancer development.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27965895 PMCID: PMC5124668 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4328697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Int ISSN: 2090-2182
Figure 1Role of neutral endopeptidase CD10 in inactivating multiple physiologically active peptides like endothelin-1, bombesin, bradykinin, Leu- and Met-enkephalins, atrial natriuretic factor, oxytocin, neurotensin, and bombesin-like peptides present in the normal cellular microenvironment.
CD10 expression status in different cancers.
| Cancer | CD10 level | Prognosis | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prostate cancer | Decreased/total loss of CD10 expression | Androgen-independent progression | [ |
| Prostate cancer | High level of CD10 | Aggressive phenotype, higher malignancy rate, larger metastases, early death | [ |
| Breast cancer | Stromal CD10 expression | Poor prognosis, estrogen receptor negativity, high grade | [ |
| Melanomas | High CD10 expression | Advanced stage, higher metastasis | [ |
| Follicular papillary thyroid cancer | High CD10 expression | Bad | [ |
| Papillary thyroid cancer | High CD10 expression | Advanced stage | [ |
| Adenocarcinoma of stomach and colon | Decreased CD10 expression | Poor differentiation | [ |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Increased CD10 expression | Therapeutic resistance | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | Increased CD10 expression | Higher invasion | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | Serum CD10 expression | Liver metastasis | [ |
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Upregulated CD10 expression | Poor disease-free survival and overall survival | [ |
| Pancreatic endocrine tumors | Membranous expression of CD10 | Poor differentiation, high proliferative index, low microvascular density, large tumor size, metastasis, poor survival | [ |
| Cervical carcinoma | Decreased CD10 expression | Higher proliferation and invasion | [ |
| Ovarian carcinoma | Increased CD10 expression | Suppressing progressive potential | [ |
| Gastric carcinoma | Stromal cells CD10 expression | Differentiated carcinoma, high depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis | [ |
Figure 2Prostate cancer model showing (a) normal prostate, (b) early prostate cancer, and (c) late stage aggressive prostate cancer. High amount of peptides accumulated in the cellular microenvironment facilitates neoplastic transformation and further progression. Excess neuropeptides like bombesin and endothelin-1 (ET-1) as substrate deregulate multiple signalling pathways and make the cancer aggressive and treatment refractory.
Main signalling pathways involved in CD10 mediated malignancies.
| Cancer | Signalling pathway | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Prostate cancer | CD10-FAK kinase interaction | [ |
| FGF-2-mediated angiogenesis | [ | |
| Non-small cell lung cancer | Hypoxia induced stromal CD10 upregulation | [ |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Increased expression of OCT3/4 by CD10-positive population | [ |
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Twist1 mediated CD10 upregulation | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Decreased CD10 expression with high NF- | [ |
| Prostate cancer | CD10 loss mediated Akt activation | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | CD10 overexpression with MUC2 reduced expression | [ |
| Leukemias | DNA methylation of promoter region of CD10 | [ |