| Literature DB >> 30621060 |
Joshua S Brzozowski1, Kathryn A Skelding2.
Abstract
The importance of Ca2+ signalling in key events of cancer cell function and tumour progression, such as proliferation, migration, invasion and survival, has recently begun to be appreciated. Many cellular Ca2+-stimulated signalling cascades utilise the intermediate, calmodulin (CaM). The Ca2+/CaM complex binds and activates a variety of enzymes, including members of the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase (CaMK) family. These enzymes control a broad range of cancer-related functions in a multitude of tumour types. Herein, we explore the cancer-related functions of these kinases and discuss their potential as targets for therapeutic intervention.Entities:
Keywords: CaMKI; CaMKII; CaMKIV; CaMKK; anti-cancer drugs
Year: 2019 PMID: 30621060 PMCID: PMC6469190 DOI: 10.3390/ph12010008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Schematic representing the domain structure of CaMKK. There are two CaMKK isoforms—CaMKKα and CaMKKβ. CaMKK consists of a unique N-terminal domain (grey), a catalytic domain (red) which contains an ATP binding region, and a regulatory domain (blue) containing overlapping autoinhibitory and calmodulin (CaM) binding regions. Phosphorylation sites are indicated by green balls, with protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation sites indicated with red arrows.
Figure 2Schematic representing the domain structure of the CaMKI family. There are four CaMKI isoforms—CaMKIα, CaMKIβ, CaMKIγ, and CaMKIδ, with each isoform sharing a similar structure. CaMKI consists of a unique N-terminal domain (grey), adjacent to a catalytic domain (red) which contains an ATP binding region, and a regulatory domain (blue) containing overlapping autoinhibitory and calmodulin (CaM) binding regions. Phosphorylation sites are indicated by green balls.
Figure 3Schematic representing the domain structure of the CaMKII family. There are four CaMKII isoforms—CaMKIIα, CaMKIIβ, CaMKIIγ, and CaMKIIδ, with each isoform sharing a similar structure. CaMKII consists of a unique N-terminal domain (grey), adjacent to a catalytic domain (red) which contains an ATP binding region, and a regulatory domain (blue) containing overlapping autoinhibitory and calmodulin (CaM) binding regions. Phosphorylation sites are indicated by green balls. All isoforms also contain a C-terminal association domain (brown), which is involved in the formation of CaMKII multimers.
Figure 4Schematic representing the domain structure of the CaMKIV family. The two CaMKIV isoforms—CaMKIVα and CaMKIIβ differ only at their N-terminus. CaMKIV consists of a unique N-terminal domain (grey), adjacent to a catalytic domain (red) which contains an ATP binding region, and a regulatory domain (blue) containing overlapping autoinhibitory and calmodulin (CaM) binding regions. Phosphorylation sites are indicated (green balls).
The Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase (CaMK) family is overexpressed in a range of cancer types. AML acute myeloid leukaemia; BPH Benign prostatic hyperplasia; ccRCC clear cell renal cell carcinoma; CML chronic myeloid leukaemia; GBM glioblastoma multiforme; GOBO gene expression based outcome for breast cancer; GWAS Genome Wide Association Study; HBV Hepatitis B virus; HCC hepatocellular carcinoma; NHT Neoadjuvant hormone therapy; NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer; PIN Prostate intraepithelial neoplasia; TCGA the cancer genome atlas; TMA tissue microarray.
| CaMK Family Member | Cancer | Sample Type | Expression | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CaMKKβ | Prostate | Prostate cancer TMA ( | Increased protein expression in prostate cancer compared to PIN and BPH and in castrate-resistant cancer. Reduced expression following NHT. | [ |
| Prostate cancer progression ( | Increased protein expression in prostate cancer compared to normal prostate and with increasing Gleason score | [ | ||
| Normal prostate and prostate cancer TMA ( | Increased protein expression in primary prostate cancer and bone metastasis compared to normal prostate | [ | ||
| Gastric | Gastric adenocarcinoma and normal oesophagus TMA ( | Increased protein expression in gastric tumours compared to normal oesophagus | [ | |
| Liver | Hepatocellular carcinoma transcriptome profile microarray ( | Increased expression in liver cancer and | [ | |
| Glioma | Human glioma and normal brain tissue ( | [ | ||
| Ovarian | High grade serous papillary ovarian cystadenocarcinoma and high-grade ovarian carcinoma with mucinous features ( | Increased protein expression in high grade serous papillary cystadenocarcinoma and high-grade ovarian cancer with mucinous features compared to non-malignant stromal tissue. | [ | |
| CaMKI | AML | TCGA AML database ( | [ | |
| Endometrial cancer | Endometrial carcinoma and normal endometria ( | Protein expression is associated with PCNA-labeling, stage, histological grade, the presence of invasion and outcome | [ | |
| Breast cancer | Primary breast ductal carcinoma ( | [ | ||
| ccRCC | ccRCC and adjacent normal tissue ( | [ | ||
| CaMKII | CML | Peripheral blood ( | CaMKIIγ upregulated at diagnosis and in treatment resistance | [ |
| AML | Peripheral blood samples ( | Total and phosphorylation of CaMKIIγ at T287 increased in AML | [ | |
| Endometrial cancer | Endometrial carcinoma and normal endometria ( | Protein expression is associated with PCNA-labeling, stage, histological grade, the presence of invasion and outcome | [ | |
| Colon cancer | Paracancerous tissue, well-differentiated and poorly differentiated colon cancer ( | CaMKII protein expression increased in colon cancer compared to paracancerous tissue, and increased with poor differentiation | [ | |
| Breast cancer | GOBO Breast Cancer Database ( | [ | ||
| Osteosarcoma | Chondroblastic, osteoblastic and fibroblastic subtypes ( | Phosphorylation of αCaMKII at T286 is increased in osteosarcoma compared to normal osteoblasts and mesenchymal stromal cells | [ | |
| Primary osteosarcoma tumours ( | Phosphorylation of αCaMKII at T286 is increased in osteosarcoma | [ | ||
| Lung cancer | Oncomine databases ( | [ | ||
| GWAS in NSCLC patients ( | Rs10023113 in | [ | ||
| Gastric cancer | Non-metastatic and metastatic gastric cancer tissues ( | Phosphorylation at T286 is increased in metastatic compared to non-metastatic tissue | [ | |
| CaMKIV | AML | TCGA AML database ( | [ | |
| HCC | Normal liver, chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis, and HCC ( | CaMKIV protein expression and activation increased in HCC compared to normal liver and cirrhosis | [ |
The calcium/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase family mediate a variety of cancer-related functions in multiple cancer types in vitro. AML acute myeloid leukaemia; AIP autocamtide-2 inhibitory peptide; HCC hepatocellular carcinoma; siRNA small interfering RNA; shRNA short hairpin RNA; WT wild-type.
| Target | Cancer | Cell Line(s) | Method of Manipulation | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CaMKK | Prostate | LNCaP | Pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased proliferation | [ |
| LNCaP, VCqP, C4-2B, 22Rv1 | siRNA and pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased proliferation | [ | ||
| LNCaP | siRNA and pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased migration and invasion | [ | ||
| LNCaP | CaMKKβ overexpression | Increased migration | [ | ||
| LNCaP | CaMKKβ overexpression | Decreased proliferation | [ | ||
| DU145 | CaMKKβ siRNA | Decreased proliferation | [ | ||
| Gastric | AGS, KATO-III, SNU-16, N87 | CaMKKβ siRNA | Decreased proliferation | [ | |
| SNU-1, N87 | CaMKKβ siRNA and pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased proliferation and induced apoptosis | [ | ||
| HCC | PHM1, SK-Hep1, HepG2 | CaMKKβ siRNA and pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased proliferation | [ | |
| Glioma | U-87MG | CaMKKβ siRNA | Decreased proliferation, migration and invasion | [ | |
| Ovarian | SKOV-3, OVCAR-3 | CaMKKβ siRNA and pharmacological inhibition (STO-609) | Decreased proliferation and induced apoptosis | [ | |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | CaMKKα and CaMKKβ siRNA | Arrested cells in G1 | [ | |
| Medulloblastoma | DOAY | Expression of dominant negative CaMKK mutant | Decreased migration | [ | |
| CaMKI | AML | MV-4-11, Kasumi-1 | shRNA and CaMKI overexpression | Downregulation decreased proliferation; Overexpression of kinase dead mutant decreased colony formation | [ |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | siRNA | Arrested cells in G1 | [ | |
| Medulloblastoma | DOAY | Expression of dominant negative CaMKI mutant | Decreased migration | [ | |
| CaMKII | Osteosarcoma | MG-63, 143B, HOS | CaMKIIα shRNA and overexpression | Knockdown decreased proliferation, migration and invasion. Overexpression increased proliferation, migration, invasion | [ |
| MG-63, 154B | Wild-type and K42M kinase dead CaMKIIα overexpression | K42M kinase dead overexpression reduced growth | [ | ||
| AML | KG1, KCL22, THP-1, Kasumi-1 | Overexpression of kinase dead truncated CaMKIIγ, CaMKIIγ shRNA, pharmacological inhibition (KN-62, KN-93, KN-92) | Kinase dead overexpression, shRNA and pharmacological inhibition decreased colony formation and proliferation. | [ | |
| Lung cancer | SCC-9, NCI-H345, NCI-H128, NCI-H146, NCI-H69 | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-62) | Slowed progression through S phase and decreased proliferation | [ | |
| Medullary thyroid cancer | TT, MZ-CRC1 | Pharmacological inhibition (antCaNtide) | Decreased cell proliferation | [ | |
| Colon cancer | HCT116 | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-92, KN-93) | Decreased proliferation, migration and invasion | [ | |
| Gastric cancer | BGC-823 | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-93) and CaMKIIβ shRNA | Decreased cell proliferation and migration, induced apoptosis | [ | |
| BGC-823 | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-62) and H282R constitutively active CaMKIIα overexpression | Pharmacological inhibition decreased cell proliferation. Overexpression of constitutively active increased cell proliferation, migration and invasion | [ | ||
| Prostate cancer | C4-2B, LNCaP, PC3, DU145 | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-93) | Decreased proliferation | [ | |
| 1542-CP3TX | Pharmacological inhibition (AIP) | Decreased cell migration | [ | ||
| T cell lymphoma | H9 | CaMKIIγ knockout by CRISPR/Cas | Decreased proliferation and colony formation | [ | |
| Breast cancer | MDA-MB-231, MCF-7 | Overexpression of CaMKIIα, T286D (phosphomimic) and T286V (phosphonull), Pharmacological inhibition (KN-92, KN-93, AIP) | Overexpression of WT and phosphomimic forms increased cell proliferation, migration and invasion. Pharmacological inhibition decreased migration and invasion | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Overexpression of CaMKIIα, T286D (phosphomimic) and T253D (phosphomimic) | Overexpression of WT and T286D increased proliferation. Overexpression of T253D decreased proliferation | [ | ||
| Glioma | C6, U-251MG | Pharmacological inhibition (KN-93) | Decreased migration | [ | |
| D54, H8a | Pharmacological inhibition (AIP) | Decreased migration | [ | ||
| U-87MG | CaMKIIγ siRNA, pharmacological inhibition (KN-93) | Decreased proliferation, invasion and neurosphere formation | [ | ||
| CaMKIV | AML | Lin− AML, MV-4-11, Kasumi-1 | CaMKIV and K75M overexpression and CaMKIV shRNA | CaMKIV-K75M overexpression and shRNA knockdown decreased colony formation. shRNA knockdown induced apoptosis and decreased proliferation. | [ |
| U937 | CaMKIV wild-type and K71M kinase dead mutant overexpression | Cells arrested in G0/G1 following WT, but not K71M, overexpression | [ | ||
| HCC | PHM1, SK-Hep1 | CaMKIV siRNA | Inhibited colony formation and proliferation | [ |
Figure 5Structures of STO-609, KN-62, KN-93, berbamine dihydrochloride and bbd24.
Effects of pharmacological inhibitors of CaMK family members on tumour burden in in vivo animal models of cancer. AR androgen receptor; CML chronic myeloid leukaemia; DEN diethylnitrosamine; HCC hepatocellular carcinoma; MNU N-methyl-N-nitrosourea; NOD-SCID non-obese diabetic severe combined immunodeficient; NSG nod scid gamma.
| Pharmacological Agent | Cancer | Model | Treatment Schedule | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STO-609 | Prostate | Subcutaneous C4-2B xenograft in full and castrated nude mice | 10 µmol/kg STO-609 or vehicle intraperitoneally three times/week | Reduction in tumour growth, which was enhanced in castrated mice | [ |
| HCC | DEN-induced hepatic cancer model | 30 µg/kg STO-609 or vehicle intraperitoneally twice/week for 4 weeks | Reduction in tumour growth | [ | |
| KN-93 | Osteosarcoma | Subcutaneous and intratibial MG-63 xenograft in nude mice | 1 mg/kg saline or KN-93 intraperitoneally every other day for 6 weeks | Reduction in tumour growth | [ |
| Intratibial 143B xenograft in nude mice | Osmotic pump delivery of 5 µg/µL KN-93, 10 µg/µL CBO-P11 or vehicle set to release 0.25 µL/h for 2 weeks | Reduction in tumour growth alone and in combination with CBO-P11 | [ | ||
| Berbamine | HCC | Subcutaneous Huh7 or SK-Hep-1 xenograft in NOD-SCID mice | 100 mg/kg berbamine orally twice day for 5 consecutive days, 2 days withdrawal, and then repeated once | Reduction in tumour growth | [ |
| CML | Subcutaneous K562 and primary CML cells from a patient at blast crisis xenograft in nude mice | 100 mg/kg berbamine, imatinib or vehicle orally three time daily for 10 days | Reduction in tumour growth | [ | |
| T cell lymphoma | MNU-induced lymphoma model and subcutaneous H9 xenograft in NSG mice | 50 m 100 or 150 mg/kg berbamine, or vehicle, orally administered to mice 2 times a day for 14 days, 14 days withdrawal, cycle repeated; Xenograft study: 150 mg/kg berbamine or vehicle oral twice a day | Reduction in tumour growth in both models | [ |