| Literature DB >> 28400788 |
Julien Balzeau1, Miriam R Menezes1, Siyu Cao1, John P Hagan1.
Abstract
Among all tumor suppressor microRNAs, reduced let-7 expression occurs most frequently in cancer and typically correlates with poor prognosis. Activation of either LIN28A or LIN28B, two highly related RNA binding proteins (RBPs) and proto-oncogenes, is responsible for the global post-transcriptional downregulation of the let-7 microRNA family observed in many cancers. Specifically, LIN28A binds the terminal loop of precursor let-7 and recruits the Terminal Uridylyl Transferase (TUTase) ZCCHC11 that polyuridylates pre-let-7, thereby blocking microRNA biogenesis and tumor suppressor function. For LIN28B, the precise mechanism responsible for let-7 inhibition remains controversial. Functionally, the decrease in let-7 microRNAs leads to overexpression of their oncogenic targets such as MYC, RAS, HMGA2, BLIMP1, among others. Furthermore, mouse models demonstrate that ectopic LIN28 expression is sufficient to drive and/or accelerate tumorigenesis via a let-7 dependent mechanism. In this review, the LIN28/let-7 pathway is discussed, emphasizing its role in tumorigenesis, cancer stem cell biology, metabolomics, metastasis, and resistance to ionizing radiation and several chemotherapies. Also, emerging evidence will be presented suggesting that molecular targeting of this pathway may provide therapeutic benefit in cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Lin28; cancer stem cells; let-7; microRNAs; proto-oncogene proteins
Year: 2017 PMID: 28400788 PMCID: PMC5368188 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2017.00031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Figure 1Schematic of human LIN28A and LIN28B proteins. These highly related proto-oncogenes have two distinct RNA binding regions. The first is a cold-shock domain (highlighted in blue) with preference for GNGAY RNA sequences while the CCHC Zn fingers (highlighted in green) bind preferentially to a GRAG motif (R = G or A). Binding to both RNA sites is required for high affinity pre-let-7 binding. Putative nucleolar localization signal (NoLS) and nuclear localization signal (NLS) are reported for LIN28B.
Figure 2Alignment of human pre-let-7 sequences (partial) with a focus on the terminal loop. The bases shown in red font are part of the let-7-5p/let-7-3p microRNA duplex following cytoplasmic Dicer cleavage. Black boxes and asterisks denote perfectly conserved bases while blue boxes represent bases where 10/12 are identical across all let-7 family members. Note that the GRAG (9 GGAG > 2 GAAG) motif is conserved across all family members except human let-7a-3 that is reported to escape LIN28AB-mediated repression. This RNA sequence motif is bound by the CCHC zinc fingers while the cold shock domain binds the GNGAY motif (and close variants) that lies at varying distances 5′ of the GGAG motif.
Figure 3The LIN28AB/let-7 axis has significant biological functions. LIN28AB expression is high in undifferentiated cells where these proteins block biogenesis of the let-7 microRNA family. As differentiation progresses, LIN28AB expression is lost, resulting in production of mature let-7 microRNAs that themselves negatively regulate LIN28AB. During cellular transformation, wound healing (in particular in young mammals), and in the generation of iPSCs, LIN28AB helps drive pluripotency, self-renewal, de-differentiation, and/or cellular transformation.
Figure 4The LIN28AB/let-7 axis has significant impact on cancer hallmarks. LIN28AB through let-7 dependent and independent mechanisms promote multiple processes that promote cancer development and progression.
Figure 5Model for LIN28A/ZCCHC11 regulation of let-7 microRNA biogenesis, promoting cellular proliferation and modifying bioenergetics. LIN28A recruits the TUTase ZCCHC11 to pre-let-7 where ZCCHC11 adds a short polyU tail to pre-let-7. Pre-let-7 is no longer a DICER substrate and is targeted for degradation by DIS3L2, thereby blocking let-7 maturation into its functional tumor suppressor form. Loss of mature let-7 microRNAs causes overexpression of numerous oncogenes and bioenergetic genes.
Clinical relevance of LIN28A/LIN28B expression in human cancers.
| 20 cancer types | Meta-analysis of 46 studies | Of all tumor suppressor microRNAs, let-7 loss most frequently correlated with poor prognosis across cancers | Nair et al., | |
| Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) | 108 | IHC | LIN28B↑ poorer prognosis | Zhou et al., |
| Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor | 24 | IHC, RT-qPCR | 19/24 tumors express LIN28A, many tumors also express LIN28B by RT-qPCR | Weingart et al., |
| Brain cancers (Pediatric) | 450 | FISH, IHC | LIN28A/B serves as a diagnostic marker for pediatric brain tumors | Spence et al., |
| Breast cancer | 15 | IHC | LIN28A↑ higher grade | Viswanathan et al., |
| Breast cancer | 33 | IHC, RT-qPCR | 9/33 LIN28A-positive (correlates with HER2+), 10/33 LIN28B-positive (correlates with triple negative) | Piskounova et al., |
| Breast cancer | 569 | IHC | 174/569 had high LIN28A and were characterized by worse prognosis, LIN28A expression associated with HER2+ tumors | Feng et al., |
| Cervical cancer | 11 | IHC | LIN28A↑ higher grade | Viswanathan et al., |
| Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) | 35 | RT-qPCR | LIN28A↑ in accelerated phase & blast crisis CML in comparison to chronic phase | Viswanathan et al., |
| Colon cancer | 45 | IHC | 19/45 LIN28A-positive, 14/45 LIN28B-positive | Piskounova et al., |
| Colon cancer | 228 | Tissue microarray, IHC | LIN28B↑ reduced patient survival and higher probability of tumor recurrence | King et al., |
| Colon cancer | 357 | IHC | LIN28B↑ reduced survival and higher disease recurrence | Pang et al., |
| Colorectal cancers | 595 | IHC | 10% LIN28A+, 8% LIN28B, 20% LIN28A+/LIN28B+, LIN28A↑ reduced survival | Tu et al., |
| Esophageal cancer | 161 | IHC | Either LIN28A or LIN28B↑ more aggressive tumors and poor prognosis | Hamano et al., |
| Gastric cancer | 239 | RT-PCR, IHC | LIN28A↑ poor prognosis | Xu et al., |
| Gastric cancer | 47 | IHC | LIN28A as a predictive biomarker for neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Teng et al., |
| Gastric cancer | 298 | IHC, RT-qPCR | LIN28A↑ poor prognosis. It can be used as a prognostic factor in chemotherapy | Wang et al., |
| Gastric cancer | 97 | IHC | LIN28A↑ poor prognosis | Hu et al., |
| Germ cell tumors (Extragonadal) | 131 | IHC | LIN28A as a sensitive marker for primary extragonadal seminoma/germinomas, embryonal carcinoma, and yolk sac tumors with high specificity | Cao et al., |
| Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) | 107 | Gene microarray, Tissue microarray | LIN28A↑ shortened overall and progression-free survival | Qin et al., |
| Glioma (pediatric and *adult) | 139+ TCGA | IHC, RT-qPCR | LIN28A↑ more common in high grade/GBM, 42% of GBM express either LIN28A or LIN28B | Mao et al., |
| Liver cancer | 89 | Microarray | LIN28B↑ higher disease recurrence and associated with advanced stage | Viswanathan et al., |
| Liver cancer | 129 | RT-qPCR | LIN28A↑ prognostic factor for poor overall survival | Qiu et al., |
| Medulloblastoma | 90 | Microarray | LIN28B↑ and let-7↓ correlated with poor prognosis in Group 3 and Group 4 subtypes | Northcott et al., |
| Medulloblastoma | 238 | RNA-Seq | LIN28B↑ and let-7↓ correlated with poor prognosis in Group 3 and Group 4 subtypes | Hovestadt et al., |
| Multiple Myeloma | 542 | Microarray | LIN28B↑ poor prognosis | Manier et al., |
| Neuroblastoma | 2817 | SNP array, RT-qPCR, microarray | LIN28B↑ poor prognosis | Diskin et al., |
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma | 12 | RT-qPCR | Higher expression of LIN28A in the neoplastic samples | Sterenczak et al., |
| Increased levels of LIN28B could be associated with poor prognosis OSCCs | ||||
| Ovarian primitive germ cell tumors | 121 | IHC | LIN28A is sensitive diagnostic marker for ovarian germ cell tumors | Xue et al., |
| Ovarian cancer (Epithelial) | 140 | RT-qPCR, IHC | High LIN28B and IMP3 is associated with poorer prognosis | Hsu et al., |
| Ovarian cancer (Epithelial) | 211 | SNP assay, RT-qPCR | LIN28B↑ higher mortality rate and increased relapse risk | Lu et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | Multiple datasets | Microarray, RT-qPCR | LIN28B↑ in C5 Ovarian Cancer | Helland et al., |
| Pheochromo-cytomas and Paragangliomas | 208 | Tissue microarray | LIN28A expression is associated with mutations in one of the succinate dehydrogenase genes | Oudijk et al., |
| Primitive neuroectodermal tumor | 51 | Microarray, IHC, RT-qPCR | LIN28A is a promising prognostic marker | Picard et al., |
| Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (Supratentorial) | 47 | IHC | High LIN28A and OLIG2 is associated with poorer prognosis | Choi et al., |
| Prostate cancer | 42 | IHC | LIN28B promotes growth and activates androgen receptor | Tummala et al., |
| Prostate cancer | 41 | IHC | LIN28AB higher in metastatic tumor than primary, expression inversely correlated with ESE3/EHF | Albino et al., |
| Testicular germ cell tumor | 184 | IHC | LIN28A was a highly sensitive diagnostic marker for testicular germ cell tumors | Cao et al., |
| Wilms tumor | 105 | IHC | LIN28B overexpression is related to higher risks of relapse and poor survival | Urbach et al., |
Figure 6Transcriptional networks that regulate LIN28B expression. LIN28B is highly expressed during embryogenesis and as differentiation progresses, LIN28B expression is lost. In adult mammals, only a small subset of somatic cells exist where LIN28B expression occurs. Several transcription factors such as MYC and NF-κB promote LIN28B transcription, while REST and ESE3/EHF are transcriptional repressors.
LIN28 in cancer stem cells.
| Breast cancer | ALDH1+, high Vimentin, low E-cadherin | LIN28A | Cai et al., |
| Breast cancer | SOX2+, Nestin+, GFAP+, Synaptophysin | LIN28A | Mao et al., |
| Breast cancer | ALDH1+ | LIN28A | Yang et al., |
| Breast cancer | IMP2 | LIN28A/B | Degrauwe et al., |
| Breast cancer | High CD24, Low CD44 | LIN28B | Iliopoulos et al., |
| Breast cancer | CD44 +, CD24- | LIN28A | Cai et al., |
| Colon cancer | LGR5+, PROM1+ | LIN28B | King et al., |
| Lung cancer (Non-small cell) | CD166+ | LIN28B | Zhang et al., |
| Oral carcinoma | IGFBP5+. POSTN+ | LIN28A | Hayashi et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | Oct4+ | LIN28A | Peng et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | ALDH1+ | LIN28A | Yang et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | CD44+, CD24+, Epcam+, Ecadherin- | LIN28A | Meirelles et al., |
| Pancreatic cancer | ABCG2+, Nestin+ | LIN28A | Hamada et al., |
| Prostate cancer | Sox2+, Nanog+, Oct4+ | LIN28B | Kong et al., |
| Prostate cancer | ESE3/EHF | LIN28A/B | Albino et al., |
LIN28 and let-7 in resistance to anticancer therapies.
| Breast cancer | LIN28A | Paclitaxel | Lv et al., |
| Breast cancer | LIN28A | Radiation | Wang et al., |
| Breast cancer | let-7a, b, c, d, e, f, g, i | Tamoxifen | Zhao et al., |
| Breast cancer | let-7b | 5-Fluorouracil, Doxorubicin | Wang et al., |
| Breast cancer | let-7e | Doxorubicin | Lv et al., |
| Gastric cancer | LIN28A | Oxaliplatin, Paclitaxel, Doxorubicin, Fluorouracil | Teng et al., |
| Gastric cancer | let-7b | Cisplatin, Vincristine | Yang X. et al., |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | let-7a, b, c, d, e, f, g, i | Radiation | Chaudhry et al., |
| Hepatocellular Cancer | LIN28A | Paclitaxel | Tian et al., |
| Hepatocellular Cancer | let-7g | 5-Fluorouracil | Tang et al., |
| Lung cancer | LIN28A | Radiation | Oh et al., |
| Lung cancer | LIN28B | Radiation | Jeong et al., |
| Oral cancer | let-7d | Cisplatin/paclitaxel | Chang et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | LIN28A | Doxorubicin/Cisplatin | Meirelles et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | LIN28B | Paclitaxel | Yan et al., |
| Ovarian cancer | let-7g | Doxorubicin | Boyerinas et al., |
| Pancreatic cancer | LIN28A | Radiation | Oh et al., |
| Pancreatic cancer | let-7b, c, d, e | Gemcitabine | Li et al., |
| Pancreatic cancer | let-7a | Gemcitabine | Bhutia et al., |
| Prostate cancer | LIN28A | Enzalutamide, Abiraterone, Bicalutamide | Tummala et al., |
| Renal cell carcinoma | let-7b, c | 5-Fluorouracil | Peng et al., |