| Literature DB >> 28893247 |
Hui Wang1, Liang Zou2, Ke Ma1, Jiankun Yu1, Huizhe Wu3, Minjie Wei3, Qinghuan Xiao4.
Abstract
TMEM16A (known as anoctamin 1) Ca2+-activated chloride channel is overexpressed in many tumors. TMEM16A overexpression can be caused by gene amplification in many tumors harboring 11q13 amplification. TMEM16A expression is also controlled in many cancer cells via transcriptional regulation, epigenetic regulation and microRNAs. In addition, TMEM16A activates different signaling pathways in different cancers, e.g. the EGFR and CAMKII signaling in breast cancer, the p38 and ERK1/2 signaling in hepatoma, the Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK1/2 signaling in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and bladder cancer, and the NFκB signaling in glioma. Furthermore, TMEM16A overexpression has been reported to promote, inhibit, or produce no effects on cell proliferation and migration in different cancer cells. Since TMEM16A exerts different roles in different cancer cells via activation of distinct signaling pathways, we try to develop the idea that TMEM16A regulates cancer cell proliferation and migration in a cell-dependent mechanism. The cell-specific role of TMEM16A may depend on the cellular environment that is predetermined by TMEM16A overexpression mechanisms specific for a particular cancer type. TMEM16A may exert its cell-specific role via its associated protein networks, phosphorylation by different kinases, and involvement of different signaling pathways. In addition, we discuss the role of TMEM16A channel activity in cancer, and its clinical use as a prognostic and predictive marker in different cancers. This review highlights the cell-type specific mechanisms of TMEM16A in cancer, and envisions the promising use of TMEM16A inhibitors as a potential treatment for TMEM16A-overexpressing cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Anoctamin 1; Biomarker; Ca2+-activated chloride channel; Signaling; TMEM16A; Tumorigenesis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28893247 PMCID: PMC5594453 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-017-0720-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
TMEM16A expression and function in cancers
| Author/year | Cancer type | Cancer cells | Human samples | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell lines | Overexpression mechanism | Signaling pathways | Proliferation | Migration | Expression | Clinical outcome of overexpression | ||
| Britschgi et al./2013 [ | Breast cancer | ZR75–1, HCC1954, MDA-MB-415 | 11q13 amplification | EGFR | + | NR | High expression due to gene amplification | Poor survival |
| Wu et al./2015 [ | Breast cancer | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | High expression | Good prognosis in PR+ or HER2− breast cancer patients following tamoxifen treatment |
| Wu et al./2017 [ | Breast cancer | MCF-7, | NR | NR | + (MCF-7) | NR | High expression | Good prognosis in PR+ or HER2− breast cancer patients the low expression of Ki67 |
| Ubby et al./2013 [ | Breast cancer | HEK293 cells transfected with TMEM16A | NR | NR | No effect | No effect | mRNA isoforms similar to normal tissue | NR |
| Duvvuri et al./2012 [ | HNSCC | UM-SCC1 | 11q13 amplification | Ras-Raf-Mek-ERK1/2 | + | NR | High expression | Poor survival |
| Ruiz et al./2012 [ | HNSCC | BHY | 11q13 amplification | NR | No effect | + | High expression due to gene amplification | Poor survival |
| Ayoub et al./2010 [ | HNSCC | HEp-2 | NR | NR | No effect | + | High expression due to gene amplification | Distal metastasis |
| Shiwarski et al./2014 [ | HNSCC | UM-SCC1 | Low expression of TMEM16A via promoter hypermethylation | NR | NR | – | High expression in primary tumor and low expression in nodal metastatic tissue | NR |
| Rodrigo et al./2015 [ | HNSCC | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | High expression due to gene amplification | No correlation with clinical parameter; affects patient’s survival depending on tumor’s site. |
| Dixit et al./2015 [ | HNSCC | HPV-negative FaDu | NR | NR | + | NR | High expression in HPV-negative HNSCC via promoter hypomethylation | Decreased survival in HPV-negative HNSCC |
| Bill et al./2015 [ | HNSCC | Te11 | 11q13 amplification | EGFR signaling | + | NR | NR | NR |
| Wanitchakool et al./2017 [ | HNSCC | BHY, CAL33 | 11q13 amplification | NR | + (BHY, CAL33) | + | NR | NR |
| Shi et al./2013 [ | ESCC | KYSE30 | 11q13 amplification | NR | + | NR | High expression due to gene amplification | Lymph node metastasis and advance clinical stage |
| Cha et al./ 2015 [ | Prostate cancer | PC3 | Transcriptional regulation by testosterone | AKT activation | + | NR | High expression | NR |
| Matsuba et al./2014 [ | Prostate cancer | PC-3 | Epigenetic regulation by HDAC | NR | + | NR | NR | NR |
| Mokutani et al./2016 [ | Colorectal cancer | DLD-1 | miR-132 downregulation | NR | NR | NR | High expression due to low expression of miR-132 | Poor survival |
| Sui et al./ 2014 [ | Colorectal cancer | SW620, HCT116 LS174T | Gene amplification | MAPK (MEK and ERK1/2) signaling | + | + | NR | NR |
| Cao et al./2017 [ | Gastric cancer | AGS | MiR-381 downregulation | TGFβ signaling | NR | + | High expression due to miR-381 downregulation | Metastasis and poor prognosis |
| Deng et al./2016 [ | Hepatocellular carcinoma | SMMC-7721 | NR | MAPK (p38 and ERK1/2) signaling | + | + | High expression | NR |
| Liu et al./2014 [ | Glioma | U87MG | NR | NFκB | + | + | High expression | NR |
| Jia et al./2015 [ | Lung cancer | GLC82 | NR | NR | + | + | High expression | NR |
| Sauter et al./ 2015 [ | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | BxPC-3, | NR | NR | No effect | + | NR | NR |
| Simon et al./2013 [ | GIST | GIST-T1 | NR | NR | No effect | NR | NR | NR |
| Liu et al./2015 [ | Gastric cancer | AGS | NR | TGF-β signaling | No effect | + | High expression | Poor prognosis |
NR not reported, + increased, −, inhibited
Fig. 1The alterations of the TMEM16A gene in cBioPortal database. a TMEM16A gene was examined in 29 studies with >100 human cancer samples and >5% gene alterations. The copy number alteration (CNA) occurs more frequently in cancer. b TMEM16A missense mutations identified in cBioPortal database. A total of 165 missense mutations are shown. The most frequent mutations are R561L/Q/W, R433Q, and R588G/Q
Fig. 2TMEM16A expression is upregulated via transcriptional regulation, epigenetic regulation and microRNAs in cancer. TMEM16A upregulation is induced by IL-4 and IL-13 [64, 65], which bind to their receptors and subsequently activate JAK/STAT6 signaling. STAT6 binds to the TMEM16A promoter and increases the transcription of the TMEM16A gene. Testosterone (T) induces TMEM16A upregulation by binding to the androgen receptor (AR), which subsequently increases the transcription of the TMEM16A gene [71]. Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors reduce TMEM16A expression in breast and prostate cell lines [77]. Promoter hypomethylation contributed to TMEM16A overexpression in HPV-negative HNSCC [75] and promoter hypermethylation results in decreased TMEM16A expression in metastatic lymph node tissues [74]. miR-132 and miR-381 binds to the 3′ UTR of TMEM16A mRNA, resulting in TMEM16A downregulation [49, 55]. Downregulation of miR-132 and miR-318 contributes to TMEM16A in patients with colorectal cancer [49] and gastric cancer [55]
Fig. 3The signaling pathways that are activated by TMEM16A in cancer. TMEM16A directly interacts with EGFR [81], and promotes EGFR phosphorylation, which activates the AKT/SRC/ERK1/2 signaling [42]. In addition, TMEM16A increases autocrine secretion of EGF in breast cancer cells [42]. TMEM16A directly interacts with IP3R, and increased Ca2+ release from the ER [85]. TMEM16A activates CaMKII by increasing intracellular Ca2+ concentrations, and CaMKII subsequently activates the AKT/SRC/ERK1/2 signaling [42]. TMEM16A also activates the Ras-Raf-Mek-ERK1/2 signaling pathway in UM-SCC1 HNSCC cells and T24 bladder cells [44]. In SMMC-7721 human hepatoma cells, TMEM16A activates the p38 signaling pathway [52]. TMEM16A activates the NFκB signaling pathway and promotes the gene transcription in glioma cells [56]. +, activates the signaling pathway.?, the mechanisms of how TMEM16A activates the signaling pathway are unknown