| Literature DB >> 30123188 |
Stephania Guzman1,2, Muriel Brackstone3, Sally Radovick2,4, Andy V Babwah2,4, Moshmi M Bhattacharya1,2,5.
Abstract
The KISS1 gene encodes KISS1, a protein that is rapidly processed in serum into smaller but biologically active peptides called kisspeptins (KPs). KISS1 and the KPs signal via the G-protein coupled receptor KISS1R. While KISS1 and KPs are recognized as potent positive regulators of the reproductive neuroendocrine axis in mammals, the first reported role for KISS1 was that of metastasis suppression in melanoma. Since then, it has become apparent that KISS1, KPs, and KISS1R regulate the development and progression of several cancers but interestingly, while these molecules act as suppressors of tumorigenesis and metastasis in many cancers, in breast and liver cancer they function as promoters. Thus, they join a small but growing number of molecules that exhibit dual roles in cancer highlighting the importance of studying cancer in context. Given their roles, KISS1, KPs and KISS1R represent important molecules in the development of novel therapies and/or as prognostic markers in treating cancer. However, getting to that point requires a detailed understanding of the relationship between these molecules and different cancers. The purpose of this review is therefore to highlight and discuss the clinical studies that have begun describing this relationship in varying cancer types including breast, liver, pancreatic, colorectal, bladder, and ovarian. An emerging theme from the reviewed studies is that the relationship between these molecules and a given cancer is complex and affected by many factors such as the micro-environment and steroid receptor status of the cancer cell. Our review and discussion of these important clinical studies should serve as a valuable resource in the successful development of future clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: KISS1R; cancer; kisspeptin; metastasis; metastasis promoter; metastasis suppressor; prognostic marker
Year: 2018 PMID: 30123188 PMCID: PMC6085450 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
KISS1/KISS1R expression in patient tumors.
| Breast cancer | Increased KISS1 mRNA and protein in primary breast tumors and lymph node metastasis. | normal: 33 | ( |
| Increased | Tumor: 92 | ( | |
| Increased KISS1/KISS1R protein vs. Control | Non-tumor: 11 (fibrocystic disease) Tumor: 43 resected breast adenocarcinomas | ( | |
| KISS1 protein expression is positively associated with lymph node positive status. | Breast tumor microarray | ( | |
| Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) | Increased KISS1/KISS1R mRNA and protein in primary TNBC tumors compared to healthy breast. | Healthy: 13 | ( |
| Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) | Increased | Normal: 8 | ( |
| KP-54 immunoreactivity associated with tumor grade, stage, poor prognosis | Normal: 10 | ( | |
| Lower KISS-1 protein in HCC vs. normal. | Normal: 16 | ( | |
| Pancreatic Cancer | High level of KP-54/KISS1R immunostaining associated with longer survival. | Tumors: 53 | ( |
| Lower | Adjacent normal: 5 | ( | |
| Colorectal Cancer (CRC) | Decreased | CRC:175 | ( |
| Decreased expression of | Normal: 80 | ( | |
| Mean KP-54 (CRC): 86.2 ± 20.5 ng/ml; Mean KP-54 (control) patients: 49 ± 12.7 ng/ml | Controls: 59 | ( | |
| Decreased | Normal: 142 | ( | |
| Bladder Cancer | 804 primary bladder tumors | ( | |
| Decreased or lost | Normal urothelium: 25 | ( | |
| Renal cell Carcinoma (RCC) | Higher | Non-neoplastic: 25 | ( |
| Ovarian Carcinoma | Lower KISS1 immunostaining in primary epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) biopsies vs. control; patients with KISS1-negative tissues had a lower survival rate vs. to KISS1-positive patients | EOC: 207 | ( |
| Favorable prognosis and overall survival associated with KISS1 and KISS1R immunoreactivity | Ovarian carcinomas tissue microarray: 518 | ( | |
| Median plasma | Cancer patients: 31 | ( |
Changes in the expression of KISS1/KISS1R transcripts, protein and circulating kisspeptins in cancer patients compared to healthy subjects.