| Literature DB >> 29904382 |
Jinshuo Fan1, Zhilei Lv1, Guanghai Yang2, Ting Ting Liao1, Juanjuan Xu1, Feng Wu1, Qi Huang1, Mengfei Guo1, Guorong Hu1, Mei Zhou1, Limin Duan1, Shuqing Liu1, Yang Jin1.
Abstract
Retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptors (RORs) include RORα (NR1F1), RORβ (NR1F2), and RORγ (NR1F3). These receptors are reported to activate transcription through ligand-dependent interactions with co-regulators and are involved in the development of secondary lymphoid tissues, autoimmune diseases, inflammatory diseases, the circadian rhythm, and metabolism homeostasis. Researches on RORs contributing to cancer-related processes have been growing, and they provide evidence that RORs are likely to be considered as potential therapeutic targets in many cancers. RORα has been identified as a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer and has been investigated in melanoma, colorectal colon cancer, and gastric cancer. RORβ is mainly expressed in the central nervous system, but it has also been studied in pharyngeal cancer, uterine leiomyosarcoma, and colorectal cancer, in addition to neuroblastoma, and recent studies suggest that RORγ is involved in various cancers, including lymphoma, melanoma, and lung cancer. Some studies found RORγ to be upregulated in cancer tissues compared with normal tissues, while others indicated the opposite results. With respect to the mechanisms of RORs in cancer, previous studies on the regulatory mechanisms of RORs in cancer were mostly focused on immune cells and cytokines, but lately there have been investigations concentrating on RORs themselves. Thus, this review summarizes reports on the regulation of RORs in cancer and highlights potential therapeutic targets in cancer.Entities:
Keywords: RORα; RORβ; RORγ; cancer; retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29904382 PMCID: PMC5990620 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Studies of RORs in cancer.
| Isoforms | Cancer type | Study population/model | Expressing cell | Expression level and biologic effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RORα | BC | BC tissues | BC cell | Activates aromatase expression | ( |
| RORα | BC | Malignant and nonmalignant breast tissues | BC cell | Decreased | ( |
| RORα | Hepatoma | HCC and adjacent non-tumor tissue | Hepatoma cell | Decreased | ( |
| RORα | Colorectal cancer | Human colorectal tumors | Colorectal cancer cell | Unchanged | ( |
| RORα | Colon cancer | Human colon tumors | Colon cancer cell | Attenuates Wnt/β-catenin signaling | ( |
| RORα1 | Prostate cancer | Prostate cancer cell line | Prostate cancer cell | Activation of RORα1 reduces 5-LOX expression might interfere with the mitogenic activity of fatty acids on prostate cancer | ( |
| RORα4 | Skin cancer | SSCC tissues | SCC cell | Decreased | ( |
| RORα4 | Melanoma | Human melanoma cell lines | Melanoma cell | Expressed in WM-98, WM-164, and SCBE2 cells | ( |
| RORα | Melanoma | Human melanoma cell lines | Melanoma cell | As receptors for 20-hydroxy- and 20,23-dihydroxyvitamin D | ( |
| RORα | Melanoma | Melanoma tissues | Unspecified | Decreased | ( |
| RORα | Melanoma | Benign (nevi) and malignant (melanomas) melanocytic tumor tissues | Keratinocytes, melanoma cells | Decreased | ( |
| RORα4 | Hepatoma | Hepatoma cell line | Hepatoma cell | Upregulated by hypoxia in HepG2 cells | ( |
| RORβ | Colorectal cancer | Human primary colorectal cancer tissues | Colorectal cancer cell | Decreased | ( |
| RORβ | Colorectal cancer | Human colon cancer cell clones | Human colon cancer cell clones | Decreased | ( |
| RORβ | Neuroblastoma | Neuronal cell line | Neuroblastoma cell | Binds to ROREs with low affinity | ( |
| RORβ | Uterine leiomyosarcoma | Primary and metastatic uterine leiomyosarcoma tissues | Unspecified | Increased in primary tumor than metastatic tumor | ( |
| RORβ | Pharyngeal cancer | Pharyngeal cancer cell line | Metastatic (Detroit 562) pharynx carcinoma cell | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Lymphoma | RORγ−/−, RORγ+/−, and wild-type mice | Deficiency of RORγ leads to T cell lymphoma, metastasis, and death | ( | |
| RORγ | Multiple myeloma | PB and BM of patients with multiple myeloma | Lymphocytes | Unchanged | ( |
| RORγ | Multiple myeloma | Patients with multiple myeloma tissues | PBMC | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | BC | Human BC tissues | Unspecified | Overexpressed among IL-17Hi tumors | ( |
| RORγ | BC | Human IDC tumor tissues | Tumor-infiltrating CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | BC | BC tissues | ILC3 | Increased | ( |
| RORγ1 | BC | BC patients and cell line | BC cell | Positively associated with DMFS rate | ( |
| RORγ | BC | TCGA and GEO BC collection, BC cell lines | BC cell | Decreased | ( |
| RORγ | BC | BC cell lines | BC cell | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Melanoma | B16F10 mouse melanoma model | T cell | High IL-9 expression in RORγ− T cells leads to inhibition of melanoma | ( |
| RORγ | Melanoma | Human invasive melanomas tissues, skin samples (neonatal and adult), cultured normal and immortalized keratinocytes, and melanoma cells | T cell, melanoma cell | Inhibited by novel hydroxy derivatives of vitamin D | ( |
| RORγ | Melanoma | Melanoma tissues | Decreased | ( | |
| RORγ | Melanoma | Benign (nevi) and malignant (melanomas) melanocytic tumors | Keratinocytes, melanoma cells | Decreased | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | NSCLC tissues | Lung cancer cell | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | Peripheral blood of NSCLC patients | PBMCs | Decreased | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | Peripheral blood of NSCLC patients | PBMCs | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | Peripheral blood of NSCLC patients | PBMCs | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | Peripheral blood of NSCLC patient | PBMCs | Increased FoxP3/RORγ is higher in stage IV NSCLC patients than those of patients in stages I, II, and III | ( |
| RORγ | Lung cancer | ADC and SSC tissues | Unspecified | Higher in the tumoral region of ADC compared with squamous cell carcinoma | ( |
| RORγ | Hepatoma | Peripheral blood of hepatoma patients | PBMCs | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Hepatoma | Patients of steatosis/steatohepatitis, liver fibrosis, and HCC | Decreased | ( | |
| RORγ | Gastric cancer | Human gastritis and gastric ADC tissues, gp130F/F mice that spontaneously develop gastric inflammation-associated tumors | Increased | ( | |
| RORγ | Colorectal cancer | Human CRC tissues | Foxp3+IL-17+ cells | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Colorectal cancer | Tissues and peripheral blood of colorectal cancer patients and RORγt-deficient mice | RORγ+ Treg cells | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Colorectal cancer | Itch−/− mice | Th17 cells; innate lymphoid cells | Regulated by itch | ( |
| RORγ | Colorectal cancer | Human CRC tissues | Unspecified | Unchanged | ( |
| RORγ | Prostate cancer | Primary prostate cancer and metastatic prostate cancer samples | Prostate cancer cell | Increased | ( |
| RORγ | Cervical cancer | Peripheral blood of patients with cervical cancer or CIN | PBMCs | Increased | ( |
| RORγ1 | Fibrosarcoma | BM or spleens from fibrosarcoma mice model | Myeloid cells | Drives cancer-related myelopoiesis in response to colony-stimulating factors | ( |
ER-positive, estrogen receptor positive; BC, breast cancer; SSCC, skin squamous cell carcinoma; IL-17.
Figure 1Expression and function of receptor-related orphan receptors (RORs) in tumor microenvironment. The expression of RORα and RORβ from tumor cell and the modulated expression of RORγ in group 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3), Th17, regulatory T cell (Treg), myeloid cell, and tumor cell from tumor microenvironment are presented as reviewed in the text. The downregulation of RORα and RORβ induce antitumor effect in hepatoma, breast cancer (BC), melanoma, and colon cancer. The upregulation of RORγ in ILC3 leads to protumor effect by chemokines in BC. The downregulation of RORγ in Th17 indicates antitumor effect by IL-17 in colon cancer. The upregulation of RORγ in Treg shows protumor effect in colon cancer. The expression of RORγ in myeloid cell has protumor effects via Socs3, Bcl3, and C/EBPb. The expression of RORγ in tumor cell is either increased or decreased depending on the cancer type. Increased expression of RORγ in lung cancer, prostate cancer, and gastric cancer results in protumor effect, while decreased expression of RORγ in BC and melanoma could induce antitumor effect via TGFβ/epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) or vitamin D3 derivatives. The question mark refers to unknown mechanisms. The up or down black arrow refers to upregulation or downregulation. Antitumor: inhibits tumor progression; protumor: promotes tumor progression.