| Literature DB >> 29228762 |
Ines Barone1, Cinzia Giordano2, Daniela Bonofiglio1, Sebastiano Andò1, Stefania Catalano1.
Abstract
Cancers are an extraordinarily heterogeneous collection of diseases with distinct genetic profiles and biological features that directly influence response patterns to various treatment strategies as well as clinical outcomes. Nevertheless, our growing understanding of cancer cell biology and tumor progression is gradually leading towards rational, tailored medical treatments designed to destroy cancer cells by exploiting the unique cellular pathways that distinguish them from normal healthy counterparts. Recently, inhibition of the activity of phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) is emerging as a promising approach to restore normal intracellular cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signalling, and thereby resulting into the activation of various downstream molecules to inhibit proliferation, motility and invasion of certain cancer cells. In this review, we present an overview of the experimental and clinical evidences highlighting the role of PDE5 in the pathogenesis and prevention of various malignancies. Current data are still not sufficient to draw conclusive statements for cancer patient management, but could provide further rational for testing PDE5-targeting drugs as anticancer agents in clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; cancer; chemoprevention; phosphodiesterase; targeted therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 29228762 PMCID: PMC5716802 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.21837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Common structure of the different PDE enzymes
The PDE superfamily contains 11 structurally-related gene families. Some PDEs are specific for cAMP or cGMP, and some exhibit dual substrate specificity. The N-terminal portion of the PDEs contains sequences important for cellular localization. The regulatory domain contains PDE-family specific sequences responsible of modulation of PDE enzymatic activities. The catalytic domain is present in the carboxy-terminal part of PDEs and is highly conserved. A and B indicate the two Zn2 + -binding motifs (HX3HXnE/D) that include invariant histidines and are critical to catalysis. HD, Hydrophobic domains.
PDE families and inhibitors
| Isozime Family | Gene Members | Substrate Specificity | Regulation | Major Tissue and Cellular Expression | Subcellular Localization | Functions | Inhibitors | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDE1 | A, B, C | cAMP/ | Ca2+/ | Lung, heart, brain, smooth muscle, testis, sperm, macrophages, lymphocytes | Cytosolic/ | Vascular smooth muscle contraction, sperm function (PDE1A); Dopaminergic signaling, immune cell activation, and survival (PDE1B) | Vinpocetine, IC224, IC86.340, SCH51866, 8-MeoM-IBMX, ITI-214 | [ |
| PDE2 | A | cAMP/ | cGMP-stimulated | Adrenal cortex, lung, liver, platelets, heart, brain, macrophages, endothelium | Membrane-bound or cytosolic, mitochondria | Regulates aldosterone secretion, phosphorylation of calcium channel in heart, cGMP in neurons; endothelial cell function under inflammatory conditions | EHNA, BAY60–7550, IC933, PDP, OXIDOLE | [ |
| PDE3 | A, B | cAMP/ | Phosphorylation/cGMP-inhibited | Lung, heart, adipose tissue, adipocytes, liver, smooth muscle, kidney, hepatocytes, pancreatic beta cells, immune cells, platelets | Membrane-bound or cytosolic | Cardiac contractility, platelet aggregation, vascular smooth muscle contraction, oocyte maturation, renin release (PDE3A) | Milrinone, Tolafentrine, Enoximone, K-134, Cilostazol, Cilostamide, Trequinsin, OPC-33540 | [ |
| PDE4 | A, B, C, D | cAMP | Phosphorylation/cAMP-specfic | Broad, cardiovascular, neural, immune and inflammatory systems | Membrane-bound or cytosolic | Brain function, monocyte and macrophage activation, neutrophil infiltration, vascular smooth muscle proliferation, fertility, vasodilatation, cardiac contractility | Cilomilast, Rolipram, Ro20–1724, Roflumilast, AWD12281, V11294A, SCH35159, GSK256066, Denbufylline, Arofylline, Apremilast | [ |
| PDE5 | A | cGMP | Phosphorylation/cGMP-specific | Broad, lung, cerebellum, heart, brain, platelets, vascular myocytes, cardiac myocytes, gastrointestinal tissues and penis | Cytosolic | Vascular smooth muscle contraction, platelet aggregation, cGMP signaling in brain | Sildenafil, Taldanafil, DA8159, Exisulind, E402, Vardenafil, Zaprinast, DMPPO, Dipyridamole, Mirodenafil | [ |
| PDE6 | A, B, C, D, G | cGMP | Phosphorylation/cGMP-specific | Retina and pineal gland | Cytosolic | Phototransduction | Avanafil, Udenafil, Zaprinast | [ |
| PDE7 | A, B | cAMP | Transduction activated/ cAMP-specific | Heart, liver, kidney, brain, pancreas, testis, spleen, skeletal muscle, immune cells | Cytosolic | Immune cell activation (PDE7A) | ASB16165, BRL50481, IC242, Dipyridamole, BMS-586353, Thiadiazoles | [ |
| PDE8 | A, B | cAMP | cAMP-specfic | Broad, testis, liver, heart, kidney, brain, skeletal muscle, thyroid, spleen, colon, ovary, immune cells | Membrane-bound or cytosolic, mitochondria | T-cell activation, sperm or Leydig cell function, T4 and T3 production (PDE8A) | Dipyridamole, PF-04957325 | [ |
| PDE9 | A | cGMP | cGMP-specific | Broad, kidney, liver, lung, brain, spleen, prostate, heart | Cytosolic or nuclear | NO-cGMP signaling in brain | BAY 73–6691, SCH-51866, WYQ C28L, PF-04447943 | [ |
| PDE10 | A | cAMP/ | Unknown | Brain, heart, thyroid, testis | Cytosolic or particulate | Learning and memory | Papaverine, Dipyridamole, PQ-10, TP-10, MP-10 | [ |
| PDE11 | A | cAMP/ | Unknown | Liver, prostate, testis, salivary and pituitary gland | Cytosolic | Sperm development and function | None selective | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signaling pathways
This graphic shows the basic synthetic, regulatory and downstream signalings that mediate the effects of endogenous cGMP in cells. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5), which catalyzes the hydrolytic breakdown of cGMP into its biologically inactive derivative, regulates the amplitude and the duration of cGMP signalling. pGC, particulate Guanylyl Cyclase; sGC, soluble Guanylyl Cyclase; CNG-Ion channels, cyclic nucleotide-gated Ion channels; PKG, cGMP-dependent Protein Kinase or Protein Kinase G; MYTP, Myosin Phosphatase Targeting Subunit; MLCK, Myosin Light Chain Kinase; RGS2, Regulatory of G-coupled Signaling 2; ROCK, Rho-kinase.
Proposed novel applications of PDE5 inhibitors
| Applications | Conditions | Agents | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male genitourinary dysfunctions | Benign prostatic hyperplasia and lower urinary tract symptoms | Sildenafil, Tadalafil, Vardenafil, UK-369, 003 | [ |
| Neurologic dysfunctions | Neurogenesis and recovery from stroke | Tadalafil, Sildenafil | [ |
| Tissue and organ protection | Antineoplastic agent toxicity | Sildenafil | [ |
| Cutaneous Ulcerations | Antiphospholipid syndrome | Sildenafil | [ |
| Transplant and reconstructive surgery | Heart transplant | Sildenafil | [ |
| Female genital dysfunctions | Fertility | Sildenafil | [ |
| Diabetes | Neuropathy and vasculopathy | Sildenafil | [ |
Figure 3Proposed mechanisms underlying the anti-cancer activities of PDE5 inhibitors
PDE5 inhibitors may hamper tumor progression by activating downstream signaling pathways, mainly PKG-mediated ones, which induce apoptosis, autophagy, growth suppression, inhibition of angiogenesis and of stemness. PDE5 inhibitors may also enhance the therapeutic effectiveness of multiple anti-neoplastic agents by increasing intracellular accumulation of drugs and cGMP levels through the block of the substrate efflux function of ABC multidrug-resistant transporters. ABC transporter Efflux Pumps, ATP-binding cassette transporter Efflux Pumps; ROS, Radical Oxygen Species; HSP, Heat Shock Protein; GRB78, Glucose-Regulated Protein; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinases; ERK, Extracellular Signal-regulated Kinases; MST, Mammalian Ste20-like Protein Kinase; LAT, Large Tumor Suppressor Kinase; TAZ, Transcription Regulator Protein-1.
List of the studies on PDE5 inhibitors and cancer at www.clinicaltrials.gov*
| Inhibitor | Indication | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sildenafil | Pancreatic Cancer, Cholangiocarcinoma | Phase 1 (recruiting) | NCT02106871 |
| Tadalafil | Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma | Phase 1 (recruiting) | NCT02544880 |
| Vardenafil | Glioma, Brain Neoplasms, Brain Metastasis | Early Phase 1 (recruiting) | NCT02279992 |
| Udenafil | Sigmoid Colon and Rectal Cancers | Phase 2 (completed) | NCT00607282 |