| Literature DB >> 30211123 |
Karolina Pospiech1, Elzbieta Płuciennik1, Andrzej K Bednarek1.
Abstract
The WWOX tumor suppressor gene is located at 16q23. 1-23.2, which covers the region of FRA16D-a common fragile sites. Deletions within the WWOX coding sequence are observed in up to 80% of breast cancer cases, which makes it one of the most common genetic alterations in this tumor type. The WWOX gene is known to play a role in breast cancer: increased expression of WWOX inhibits cell proliferation in suspension, reduces tumor growth rates in xenographic transplants, but also enhances cell migration through the basal membrane and contributes to morphological changes in 3D matrix-based cell cultures. The WWOX protein may act in several ways, as it has three functional domains-two WW domains, responsible for protein-protein interactions and an SDR domain (short dehydrogenase/reductase domain) which catalyzes conversions of low molecular weight ligands, most likely steroids. In epithelial cells, WWOX modulates gene transcription through interaction with p73, AP-2γ, and ERBB4 proteins. In steroid hormone-regulated tissues like mammary gland epithelium, the WWOX SDR domain acts as a steroid dehydrogenase. The relationship between WWOX and hormone receptors was shown in an animal model, where WWOX(C3H)+/-mice exhibited loss of both ER and PR receptors. Moreover, in breast cancer specimens, a positive correlation was observed between WWOX expression and ER status. On the other hand, decreased WWOX expression was associated with worse prognosis, namely higher relapse and mortality rates in BC patients. Recently, it was shown that genomic instability might be driven by the loss of WWOX expression. It was reported that WWOX plays role in DNA damage response (DDR) and DNA repair by regulating ATM activation through physical interaction. A genome caretaker function has also been proposed for WWOX, as it was found that WWOX sufficiency decreases homology directed repair (HDR) and supports non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) repair as the dominant DSB repair pathway by Brca1-Wwox interaction. In breast cancer cells, WWOX was also found to modulate the expression of glycolysis pathway genes, through hypoxia-inducible transcription factor 1α (HIF1α) regulation. The paper presents the current state of knowledge regarding the WWOX tumor suppressor gene in breast cancer, as well as future research perspectives.Entities:
Keywords: WWOX; breast cancer; cancer progression; carcinogenesis; tumor suppressor
Year: 2018 PMID: 30211123 PMCID: PMC6121138 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Historical and contextual advances in breast cancer WWOX research.
| DNA damage response and genome instability | “Fhit and Wwox loss-associated genome instability: A genome caretaker one-two punch” | Schrock et al. ( |
| “Wwox-Brca1 interaction: role in DNA repair pathway choice” | Schrock et al. ( | |
| WWOX modulates the ATR-mediated DNA damage checkpoint response | Abu-Odeh et al. ( | |
| “WWOX, the common fragile site FRA16D gene product, regulates ATM activation and the DNA damage response” | Abu-Odeh et al. ( | |
| “Aberrant expression of DNA damage response proteins is associated with breast cancer subtype and clinical features” | Guler et al. ( | |
| Bone metastasis from breast carcinoma | “Epigenetic regulation of HGF/Met receptor axis is critical for the outgrowth of bone metastasis from breast carcinoma” | Bendinelli et al. ( |
| “Functions and epigenetic regulation of Wwox in bone metastasis from breast Carcinoma: Comparison with primary tumors” | Maroni et al. ( | |
| “HGF and TGFβ1 differently influenced Wwox regulatory function on Twist program for mesenchymal-epithelial transition in bone metastatic vs. parental breast carcinoma cells” | Bendinelli et al. ( | |
| “Hypoxia induced E-cadherin involving regulators of Hippo pathway due to HIF-1α stabilization/nuclear translocation in bone metastasis from breast carcinoma” | Maroni et al. ( | |
| “Hypoxia inducible factor-1 is activated by transcriptional co-activator with PDZ-binding motif (TAZ) vs. WWdomain-containing oxidoreductase (WWOX) in hypoxic microenvironment of bone metastasis from breast cancer” | Bendinelli et al. ( | |
| “Bone metastatic process of breast cancer involves methylation state affecting E-cadherin expression through TAZ and WWOX nuclear effectors” | Matteucci et al. ( | |
| Glucose metabolism | “Tumor suppressor WWOX regulates glucose metabolism via HIF1α modulation” | Abu-Remaileh et al. ( |
| “WWOX loss activates aerobic glycolysis” | Abu-Remaileh et al. ( | |
| Mammary branching morphogenesis | “Characterization of WWOX inactivation in murine mammary gland development” | Abdeen et al. ( |
| “Conditional Wwox deletion in mouse mammary gland by means of two Cre recombinase approaches” | Ferguson et al.( | |
| “WWOX, the tumor suppressor gene affected in multiple cancers” | Lewandowska et al. ( | |
| WNT signaling pathways | “Conditional Wwox deletion in mouse mammary gland by means of two Cre recombinase approaches” | Ferguson et al. ( |
| “Inhibition of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway by the WWOX tumor suppressor protein” | Bouteille et al. ( | |
| Transcription regulation | “The cancer gene WWOX behaves as an inhibitor of SMAD3 transcriptional activity via direct binding” | Ferguson et al. ( |
| “WW domain-containing proteins, WWOX and YAP, compete for interaction with ErbB4 and modulate its transcriptional function” | Aqeilan et al. ( | |
| “Physical and functional interactions between the Wwox tumor suppressor protein and the AP-2gamma transcription factor” | Aqeilan et al. ( | |
| Tamoxifen resistance in BC patients | “Wwox expression may predict benefit from adjuvant tamoxifen in randomized breast cancer patients” | Göthlin et al. ( |
| “Wwox inactivation enhances mammary tumorigenesis” | Abdeen et al. ( | |
| “Wwox and Ap2γ expression levels predict tamoxifen response” | Guler et al. ( | |
| Lymph node metastasis in BC patients | “Aberrant expression of DNA damage response proteins is associated with breast cancer subtype and clinical features” | Guler et al. ( |
| Prognostic marker in BC patients | “The prognostic significance of WWOX expression in patients with breast cancer and its association with the basal-like phenotype” | Wang et al. ( |
| “Breast cancer relapse prediction based on multi-gene RT-PCR algorithm” | Pluciennik et al. ( | |
| “Association of Wwox with ErbB4 in breast cancer” | Aqeilan et al. ( | |
| “WWOX–the FRA16D cancer gene: expression correlation with breast cancer progression and prognosis” | Pluciennik et al. ( | |
| ER correlation in breast carcinomas | “Fragile histidine triad protein, WW domain-containing oxidoreductase protein Wwox, and activator protein2γ expression levels correlate with basal phenotype in breast cancer” | Guler et al. ( |
| “Frequent loss of WWOX expression in breast cancer: correlation with estrogen receptor status” | Nunez et al. ( | |
| “The fragile genes FHIT and WWOX are inactivated coordinately in invasive breast carcinoma” | Guler et al. ( | |
| Hypermethylation | “Association between CpG island methylation of the WWOX gene and its expression in breast cancers” | Wang et al. ( |
| “Inhibition of breast cancer cell growth | Iliopoulos et al. ( | |
| “Fragile genes as biomarkers: epigenetic control of WWOX and FHIT in lung, breast and bladder cancer” | Iliopoulos et al. ( | |
| Loss of expression | “Inhibition of breast cancer cell growth | Iliopoulos et al. ( |
| “The fragile genes FHIT and WWOX are inactivated coordinately in invasive breast carcinoma” | Guler et al. ( | |
| “WWOX, the FRA16D gene, behaves as a suppressor of tumor growth” | Bednarek et al. ( | |
| “Deletion map of chromosome 16q in ductal carcinoma | Chen et al. ( | |
| LOH | “WWOX: a candidate tumor suppressor gene involved in multiple tumor types” | Paige et al. ( |
| “WWOX, the FRA16D gene, behaves as a suppressor of tumor growth” | Bednarek et al. ( | |
| “WWOX, a novel WW domain-containing protein mapping to human chromosome 16q23.3–24.1, a region frequently affected in breast cancer” | Bednarek et al. ( | |
| “Construction of a high-resolution physical and transcription map of chromosome 16q24.3: a region of frequent loss of heterozygosity in sporadic breast cancer” | Whitmore et al. ( | |
| “Deletion map of chromosome 16q in ductal carcinoma | Chen et al. ( |
Figure 1Schematic model of WWOX in breast cancer.