| Literature DB >> 30691160 |
Ahmed Maklad1, Anjana Sharma2, Iman Azimi3.
Abstract
Calcium signaling, in addition to its numerous physiological roles, is also implicated in several pathological conditions including cancer. An increasing body of evidence suggest critical roles of calcium signaling in the promotion of different aspects of cancer, including cell proliferation, therapy resistance and metastatic-related processes. In many cases, this is associated with altered expression and/or activity of some calcium channels and pumps. Brain cancers have also been the subject of many of these studies. In addition to diverse roles of calcium signals in normal brain function, a number of proteins involved in calcium transport are implicated to have specific roles in some brain cancers including gliomas, medulloblastoma, neuroblastoma and meningioma. This review discusses research that has been conducted so far to understand diverse roles of Ca2+-transporting proteins in the progression of brain cancers, as well as any attempts to target these proteins towards a therapeutic approach for the control of brain cancers. Finally, some knowledge gaps in the field that may need to be further considered are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: brain cancers; calcium signaling; therapeutic targeting
Year: 2019 PMID: 30691160 PMCID: PMC6406375 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11020145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Schematic representation of major calcium channels, pumps, exchangers and sensors in mammalian cells. Ca2+ influx is mediated by plasma membrane channels including transient receptor potential (TRP) channels, voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCC), ligand-gated ionotropic P2X receptors, mechanosensitive Piezo channels, and store-operated Ca2+ entry pathway mediated by stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) sensor and ORAI1 channels. Distribution of Ca2+ against a chemical gradient across cell compartments is regulated by Ca2+ pumps including the plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA), Sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA), and Golgi network secretory pathway Ca2+/Mn2+-ATPase (SPCA). The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ channels include ryanodine receptor (RYR) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) receptor (IP3R); the latter is activated by IP3 ligand produced by the plasma membrane G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) via Gaq and phospholipase C-β (PLCβ) proteins. Two-pore channels (TPC) regulate Ca2+ release from the endolysosomal system. Mitochondrial Ca2+ levels are controlled by mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) complex, and mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCLX).
Ca2+-transporting proteins with demonstrated specific roles in brain cancers.
| Cancer | Channel/Regulator | Model | Targeting Approach | Role of Channel/Regulator | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| Primary GB cells | siRNA | Regulates proliferation (only ORAI1) and invasion | [ |
|
| U251, C6 cells | siRNA, antagonist | Regulates cell proliferation and apoptosis | [ | |
|
| U251, U87 and T98G cells | siRNA, antagonist | Regulate apoptosis and proliferation, and sensitize cells to ionizing radiation | [ | |
|
| GB primary stem cells, Xenografted mice | siRNA, antagonist | Promotes proliferation and stemness. Sensitizes cells to TMZ * | [ | |
|
| D54MG cells, flank tumor | shRNA, antagonist | Promotes cell proliferation and cytokinesis, as well as tumor size | [ | |
| D54MG cells | shRNA, antagonist | Promotes cell motility | [ | ||
|
| U251, U87, C6 cells, Xenografts | shRNA, DNC6 * antagonist | Promotes cell growth, clonogenicity, and G2/M transition | [ | |
| U251 cells | shRNA, DNC6 * antagonist | Induces HIF-1α accumulation and glucose uptake | [ | ||
| U373, HMEC-1 cells | siRNA | Promotes NFAT activation, cell proliferation and angiogenesis | [ | ||
|
| A172 cells | Overexpression | Induces cell death | [ | |
|
| A172 cells | siRNA | Promotes proliferation and migration | [ | |
|
| DBTRG cells | Agonist, antagonist | Promotes cell migration | [ | |
|
| U373 cells | Agonist | Induces apoptosis | [ | |
|
| U87MG, MZC cells | Agonist | Increases chemosensitivity | [ | |
| U87MG, MZC cells | siRNA, overexpression | Negatively regulates proliferation and resistance to cell death | [ | ||
| GB primary stem cells | Antagonist, siRNA, overexpression in xenograft | Promotes differentiation and inhibits proliferation | [ | ||
|
| U178, U87, T98G cells, Organotypic, Xenograft | Antagonist | Regulates invasion and migration | [ | |
|
| C6 cells | Agonist | Promotes migration and inflammation | [ | |
| C6 cells, Xenograft | Antagonist, shRNA | Negatively regulates cell proliferation, tumor growth and angiogenesis | [ | ||
| M059J, GL261 cells | Agonist, antagonist, siRNA | Promotes cell radiosensitivity | [ | ||
| 1321N1 cells | Agonist | Promotes ERK1/2 activation | [ | ||
|
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| DAOY, ONS76 cells, Organotypic | Agonist, antagonist, overexpression | Promotes cell motility | [ |
|
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| N1E-115 cells | siRNA, antagonist overexpression | Promotes cell proliferation | [ |
|
| NG108-15 cells | siRNA | Promotes cell differentiation | [ | |
|
| SH-SY5Y cells, Xenograft | Overexpression, antagonist | Regulates cell death/viability | [ | |
|
| N2a cells | Antagonist | Promotes cell proliferation | [ | |
|
|
| IOMM-Lee cells, xenograft | Antagonist | Promotes apoptosis and cell-cycle arrest | [ |
* DNC6, Expression of the dominant-negative mutant TRPC6; GB, glioblastoma; TMZ, temozolomide; MB, medulloblastoma.
Figure 2Schematic representation of biological processes that are promoted by Ca2+ signaling proteins in brain cancer cells. Several Ca2+ channels are shown to contribute to various pro-tumor processes in glioma cells (blue color), neuroblastoma cells (pink color) and medulloblastoma cells (violet color). These processes include proliferation, migration, invasion, therapy resistance/therapy sensitivity, differentiation, angiogenesis, inflammation and cell death. Proteins that are positioned on the borders of two processes, contribute to both processes.
Modulators of Ca2+-regulating proteins in clinical trials for treatment of brain cancers.
| Intervention | Channel/Pump Targeted | Disease | Clinical Phase | Study End Year | Results | NCT # | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verapamil +Hydroxyurea (HU) | L-type channels | Refractory Meningiomas | II | 2015 | No effect of HU or verapamil on tumor recurrence and PFS | 00706810 | [ |
| Mipsagargin | SERCA pump | Recurrent or progressive GB | II | 2017 | Favorable tolerability and pharmacokinetic profile | 02067156 | [ |
| Mibefradil +Temozolomide | T-type channels | Recurrent Glioma | I | 2017 | Well tolerated and promising responses in patients | 01480050 | [ |
| Mibefradil +Hypofractionated radiation | T-type channels | Recurrent GB | I | 2017 | Safe co-administration, effective brain penetration, and promising local control signals in some patients | 02202993 | [ |
| CTO +Temozolomide or chemoradiation | Non-voltage channels | GB and other anaplastic gliomas | I | Still active | Safe co-administration, favorable brain penetration, and promising signals of activity | 01107522 | [ |
GB, glioblastoma; PFS, progression-free survival; CTO, Carboxyamidotriazole orotate.