| Literature DB >> 28430586 |
Xiaomin Liu1, Ping Wang1, Caiyan Zhang1, Zhongliang Ma1.
Abstract
Lung cancer is a leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide. In tumors, the important role of noncoding RNA regulatory networks has been more and more reveal. EGFR has been identified as an oncogenic driver of NSCLC, especially activating mutations EGFR and its inhibition with specific TKIs can generate dramatic tumor responses. Studies have shown that EGFR plays significant roles in the progression of NSCLC. Subset analysis of the small proportion of patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer showed a disease-free survival benefit, but was underpowered to detect a survival advantage. Herein, we highlight the progression of EGFR, noncoding RNA, and their roles in carcinogenesis. We also focus on anti-lung cancer drug development and EGFR-related drug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR); lung cancer; noncoding RNA; precision medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28430586 PMCID: PMC5564844 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.16854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1EGFR signaling pathway
EGFR is a receptor protein that spans the cell membrane. TKI consists of N lobe and C lobe. EGFR-TKI competes with ATP for inhibition of this site. If the growth factor (ligand) binds to the receptor, it forms an asymmetric dimer. A variety of proteins associated with the phosphorylation of tyrosine, the downstream protein is constantly activated, as shown in chart the RAS-RAF-MAPK pathway and PI3K-AKT pathway.
Figure 2EGFR mutations and drug-resistant mechanism
As common mutant sites, the mutations of exon18-21 in EGFR are discovered. It's including common mutations and rare mutations. Common mutations are involved deletion mutations in 45 percent of 19 exon, and point mutations of L858R in 40–45 percent of 21 exon. Others are rare mutations. The reason to raise drug-resistant is that it arises new mutations, the most important mutations is T790M in 50 percent. I stands for Mutations associated with drug resistant, II stands for Mutations associated with drug sensitivity.
Figure 3Timeline of EGFR-related drug development
miRNAs that target EGFR signaling pathway involved in cancer
| miRNAs | Carcinomas | Biological effect | Regulation | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-200 | anaplastic thyroid cancer/bladder cancer | Regulate EMT and reverse resistance of EGFR therapy | Down | [ |
| miR-23b/27b | bladder cancer | Regulate EGFR and suppress cancer | Down | [ |
| miR-27a | renal cell carcinoma | Suppress human RCC cell proliferation and induce cell apoptosis | Down | [ |
| miR-133a | NSCLC | Suppresses multiple oncogenic membrane receptors and cell invasion | Down | [ |
| miR-134 | NSCLC | Inhibit proliferation | Down | [ |
| miR-7 | various cancer cells | Inhibit EGFR-PI3K-AKT signaling and reverse radio resistance | Down | [ |
| miR-34a | solid cancer | Regulate Axl receptor tyrosine kinase by targeting SIRT1 and MEK1 | Down | [ |
| miR-145 | lung cancer | Negatively regulate EGFR expression | Down | [ |
| miR-146a | NSCLC | Inhibit EGFR in NSCLC cancer cells | Down | [ |
| miR-146b-5p | glioblastoma | Suppress EGFR expression | Down | [ |
| miR-206 | squamous lung cancer | Suppress EGFR signaling | Down | [ |
| miR-135a-1 | prostate cancer | Inhibit cell growth and migration | Down | [ |
| miR-133a | NSCLC | Suppress EGFR signaling | Down | [ |
| miR-133b | NSCLC | Suppress EGFR pathway signaling and enhance susceptibility to EGFR-TKI | Down | [ |
| miR-1203,1237,541,542-5p | human lung cancer | Downregulate EGFR | Down | [ |
| miR-199a-3p | prostate cancer | Suppress the expansion and tumor | Down | [ |
| miR-2861 | cervical cancer | Inhibit tumor growth | Down | [ |
| miR-25 | lung cancer | Upregulate EGFR | Up | [ |
| miR-24 | Activates EGFR signaling | Up | [ | |
| miR-21 | glioblastoma | Regulate the EGFR/AKT pathway in a PTEN independent manner | Up | [ |
Figure 4An illustration representing long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) and they involved in EGFR signaling pathway in lung cancer