| Literature DB >> 30651114 |
Yi Liu1, Yizuo Song1, Miaomiao Ye1, Xiaoli Hu1, Z Peter Wang2,3,4, Xueqiong Zhu5.
Abstract
Accumulated evidence has demonstrated that WNT1 inducible signaling pathway protein (WISP) genes, which belong to members of the CCN growth factor family, play a pivotal role in tumorigenesis and progression of a broad spectrum of human cancers. Mounting studies have identified that WISP proteins (WISP1-3) exert different biological functions in various human malignancies. Emerging evidence indicates that WISP proteins are critically involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis, invasion and metastasis in cancers. Because the understanding of a direct function of WISP proteins in cancer development and progression has begun to emerge, in this review article, we describe the physiological function of WISP proteins in a variety of human cancers. Moreover, we highlight the current understanding of how the WISP protein is involved in tumorigenesis and cancer progression. Furthermore, we discuss that targeting WISP proteins could be a promising strategy for the treatment of human cancers. Hence, the regulation of WISP proteins could improve treatments for cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Drug; Oncogene; Targets; Therapy; WISP
Year: 2019 PMID: 30651114 PMCID: PMC6335850 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-019-1769-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1A schematic diagram of the structure of WISP proteins. WISP proteins have four highly conserved cysteine-rich motifs, which include the N-terminal motif, the von Willebrand factor-like (VWC) motif, the thrombospondin type 1 (TSP-1) motif, and the carboxy-terminal (CT) motif. The N-terminal motif consists of the first 12 cysteine residues and the IGF binding consensus sequence (GCGCCXXC). VWC and TSP1 motifs are involved in cell–cell interactions and angiogenesis inhibition. The CT motif forms a cysteine knot. WISP2 lacks the CT module
Fig. 2Illustrated pathways for WISP1-regulated downstream targets and the identified upstream regulators. “Arrow to WISP” → means “activating WISP”; “Arrows from WISP to → targets” means “activating targets”. “Blockade to WISP” means “inhibiting WISP”; “Blockade from WISP to targets” meaning “inhibiting targets”
Fig. 3Illustrated pathways for WISP2-regulated downstream targets and the identified upstream regulators. “Arrow to WISP” → means “activating WISP”; “Arrows from WISP to → targets” means “activating targets”. “Blockade to WISP” means “inhibiting WISP”; “Blockade from WISP to targets” meaning “inhibiting targets”
Fig. 4Illustrated pathways for WISP3-regulated downstream targets and the identified upstream regulators. “Arrow to WISP” → means “activating WISP”; “Arrows from WISP to → targets” means “activating targets”. “Blockade from WISP to targets” meaning “inhibiting targets”
Role of WISP1 in human cancers
| Cancer type | Function | Target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Increases cell proliferation, migration and invasion; promotes tumor growth; induces EMT; promotes type 2 cell-mediated immunity; inhibits type 1 cell mediated immunity; suppresses tumor metastasis | Inhibits E-cadherin, NDRG1; increases N-cadherin, Snail, and β-catenin | [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Promotes cell growth; Inhibits WISP1; suppresses cell proliferation, migration, and adhesion; associated with invasion, pTNM stage, and patient survival | Induced by Wnt/β-catenin pathway; activates pAkt, GSK-3β, and MMP-2 | [ |
| Colon cancer | Promotes tumorigenesis, progression and metastasis; associated with advanced pathological stage and poor prognosis; harbors loss of expression, frameshifts and mutations | Induced by DHX32, Wnt pathway | [ |
| Gastric cancer | Promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion | Activates cyclin D1 | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | Promotes malignant transformation | Inhibited by BRCA2 | [ |
| Lung cancer | Retards cell motility and invasion; promotes cancer progression; correlated to tumor histology; correlated to chemotherapeutic toxicity; leads to pulmonary metastases | Increased by S100A4 | [ |
| Melanoma | Promotes pulmonary metastases; suppresses cell growth | Increased by Notch1 | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Promotes cancer progression, migration, growth; associated with cancer stage; enhances cell adherence to bone | Increases VCAM-1; inhibits miR-126 | [ |
| Oral carcinoma | Promotes cell migration; correlated with the tumor stage and poor survival; enhances angiogenesis | Enhances ICAM-1, VEGF-A and VEGF-C; activates integrin αvβ3/FAK/c-Src and EGFR/ERK/HIF-1α pathways; inhibits miR-300 | [ |
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Enhances cell growth; associated with tumor size, tumor type, lymph node metastasis and poor prognosis; contributes to radioresistance | Not detecte | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Enhances bone cell differentiation and formation; associated with tumor stage; promotes cancer cell migration and tube formation | Enhances BMP-2, MMP-2 and MMP-9; improves VEGF-A; inhibits miR-381 | [ |
| Chondrosarcoma | Promotes cell migration | Upregulates MMP-2 | [ |
| Endometrial endometrioid adenocarcinoma | Associated with poor survival and clinical grades | Not detected | [ |
Role of WISP2 in human cancers
| Cancer type | Function | Target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Exhibits estrogen and progesterone inducible expression; enhances tumor cell proliferation and growth; associated with metastasis and late stage; inhibits tumor growth, migration and invasion; causes cell cycle arrest at the G1/G1 phase | Induced by PKA; inhibits Snail, E-cadherin, MMP-2, MMP-9, Skp2, PI3K/Akt, TGF-β pathways; inhibited by p53 mutants; induces PD-L1, p27, and FOXO3a | [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Promotes cell growth, proliferation and migration; involved in HCC progression | Increased by β-catenin, and TCF-4J; inhibited by GSK3β | [ |
| Colon cancer | WISP2 DNA expression is amplified, but function remains unknown | Not detected | [ |
| Gastric cancer | Associated with tumor stage, differentiation status, and survival; inhibits cell growth, migration and invasion | Downregulates MMP-9 and MMP-2 through JNK and ERK pathways | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | Promotes mesenchymal–epithelial transition; regulates pancreatic cancers via regulating microenvironments | Promoted by BRCA2 | [ |
| Lung cancer | Associated with adverse overall survival | N/A | [ |
| Leiomyoma | inhibits cell proliferation and motility | N/A | [ |
Role of WISP3 in human cancers
| Cancer type | Function | Target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Suppresses cell growth, invasion, metastasis; maintains acinar organization; reverses EMT to MET, reduces TICs (tumor initiating cells) | Inhibits IGF-IR, IRS1 and ERK-1/2, snail and ZEB1, BMP4, TAK1 and p38 kinase, PI3K/Akt, TβRIII, and Notch1; increases E-cadherin | [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Detected in only a few HCC samples, and its function remains unknown | Not detected | [ |
| Colon cancer | Harbors loss of expression, frameshifts, and mutations | Not detected | [ |
| Gastric cancer | Exhibits mutations and loss of expression; associated with cancer size and tumor invasion; promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion | Induces Wnt/β-catenin signaling | [ |
| Lung cancer | Exhibits mutations in early nonsmoking lung cancer patients | Not detected | [ |
| Melanoma | Shows loss of copy numbers | [ | |
| Chondrosarcoma | Promotes cell migration and differentiation | Upregulates ICAM-1and VEGF-A; inhibits miR-452 | [ |