| Literature DB >> 29601539 |
J Matthew Rhett1, Elizabeth S Yeh2.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, connexin hemichannels have become recognized as major players in modulating the inflammatory response. Chronic inflammation is documented to promote tumorigenesis and is a critical component of tumor progression. Furthermore, inflammation is strongly linked to angiogenesis, immunotolerance, invasiveness, metastasis, and resistance in breast cancers. In this review, the literature on the role of connexin hemichannels in inflammation is summarized, and the potential role for hemichannel-mediated inflammation in driving breast cancer progression is discussed. Lastly, the potential for connexin-based therapeutics to modulate the inflammatory component of the tumor microenvironment as an avenue for the treatment of breast cancer is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; connexin; hemichannels; inflammation; metastasis; purinergic; resistance; tumor-associated macrophage (TAM); tumor-associated neutrophil (TAN)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29601539 PMCID: PMC5979453 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19041043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Connexin hemichannels and tumor-associated inflammatory cells in mammary tumor progression. ① Damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), including ATP, that attract and activate macrophages and neutrophils are released from ruptured cells at the necrotic core of the tumor, and from tumor cells necrosing in response to therapy; ② Vascular endothelial cells secrete ATP through hemichannels in response to tumor-related stress, attracting macrophages and neutrophils. Endothelial cells also secrete TNF-α, which promotes tumor growth and inflammation; ③ Tumor cells may release ATP from hemichannels triggered to open by the cellular stressors intrinsic to tumor cell physiology. This can activate local macrophages (i.e., tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs)) that in turn produce pro-inflammatory cytokines. TAMs may also release neutrophil-recruiting ATP from hemichannels. In addition, tumor cells express ectonucleases that convert ATP to adenosine, which has immunosuppressive effects on tumor-associated neutrophils (TANs), TAMs, and T cells; ④ Breast cancer cells and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) produce pro-inflammatory cytokines that attract and activate TAMs and TANs. In turn, TAMs and TANs produce pro-survival and pro-growth signals that promote tumor progression; ⑤ TAMs and TANs produce pro-angiogenic factors that stimulate tumor vascularization; ⑥ TAMs aid metastatic tumor cells in intravasation; ⑦ TAMs and TANs may chaperone tumor cells through the vasculature to sites of metastasis.
Connexin-based therapeutics.
| Name | Effects | References | Clinical Trials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Extracellular loop 2 (E2) antibody | Blocks hemichannels without affecting gap junctional (GJ) communication; enhances animal survival and tumor regression in a glioblastoma model; promotes anchorage-independent growth, migration, and invasion of cultured breast cancer cells | [ | None |
| α-connexin carboxyl-terminal peptide 1 (aCT1) | Increases GJ size and gap junctional communication, and concomitantly reduces hemichannel population and cell-extracellular communication; improves wound healing; enhances the activity of targeted therapeutics in breast cancer cells; sensitizes chemoresistant glioblastoma cells to temozolomide | [ | NCT02652572—Phase I—venus leg ulcers; NCT02652754—Phase I—diabetic foot ulcers; NCT02666131—Phase III—diabetic foot ulcers; NCT02667327—Phase III—diabetic foot ulcers |
| Gap junction peptide 26 (Gap26) | Blocks hemichannels over short time periods (minutes) and gap junctional communication over long time periods (>30 min); reduces astroglial activation; reduces inflammation; reduces animal cell death due to sepsis | [ | None |
| Gap junction peptide 27 (Gap27) | Reduces astroglial activation; reduces swelling after spinal cord injury; increases inflammation in corneal wounds | [ | None |
| Gap junction peptide 19 (Gap19) | Selectively inhibits hemichannels and reduces cardiac infarct size; reduces serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines due to liver injury; increases macrophage hemichannel activity and decreases animal survival in a rodent sepsis model | [ | None |
| Peptide 5 (P5) | Reduces astroglial activation and swelling after spinal cord injury; neuroprotective in stroke models; inhibits hemichannels and improves animal survival in models of sepsis and hepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury; inhibits inflammatory infiltrates into damaged retina | [ | None |
| Juxtamembrane peptide 2 (JM2) | Inhibits hemichannels and GJ communication, and promotes microtubule polymerization; inhibits hemichannel-mediated ATP release and reduces inflammation from the foreign body response | [ | None |