| Literature DB >> 30850014 |
Sourabh Soni1,2, Prince Anand1,2, Yogendra S Padwad3,4.
Abstract
The p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38MAPK) pathway has been implicated in a variety of pathological conditions including inflammation and metastasis. Post-transcriptional regulation of genes harboring adenine/uridine-rich elements (AREs) in their 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR) is controlled by MAPK-activated protein kinase 2 (MAPKAPK2 or MK2), a downstream substrate of the p38MAPK. In response to diverse extracellular stimuli, MK2 influences crucial signaling events, regulates inflammatory cytokines, transcript stability and critical cellular processes. Expression of genes involved in these vital cellular cascades is controlled by subtle interactions in underlying molecular networks and post-transcriptional gene regulation that determines transcript fate in association with RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). Several RBPs associate with the 3'-UTRs of the target transcripts and regulate their expression via modulation of transcript stability. Although MK2 regulates important cellular phenomenon, yet its biological significance in tumor progression has not been well elucidated till date. In this review, we have highlighted in detail the importance of MK2 as the master regulator of RBPs and its role in the regulation of transcript stability, tumor progression, as well as the possibility of use of MK2 as a therapeutic target in tumor management.Entities:
Keywords: 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR); Adenine/uridine-rich elements (AREs); Inhibitors; Mitogen-activated protein kinase-activated protein kinase 2 (MK2); RNA binding proteins (RBPs); Therapeutics; Transcript stability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30850014 PMCID: PMC6408796 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-019-1115-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1p38MAPK signalling cascade. A multitude of extracellular stimuli and mitogens lead to the activation of p38MAPK signalling pathway consisting of a kinase network as diagrammatically represented in the figure. When activated by p38, MK2 gets exported to the cytoplasm (NLS gets masked and NES is functional) where it controls the transcript stability of tumor pathogenesis related mRNAs harbouring AREs in their 3′-UTRs via regulation of RNA-binding proteins
MK2 regulates transcript stability via RBPs
| RNA Binding Protein | Target mRNA | Influence on mRNA | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| AUF1 | GM-CSF | Destabilized | [ |
| IL-6 | Destabilized | [ | |
| TNF-α | Destabilized | [ | |
| VEGF | Destabilized | [ | |
| HuR | COX-2 | Stabilized | [ |
| Cyclins | Stabilized | [ | |
| GM-CSF | Stabilized | [ | |
| HIF-1α | Stabilized | [ | |
| IL-6 | Stabilized | [ | |
| IL-8 | Stabilized | [ | |
| MMP-9 | Stabilized | [ | |
| p21 | Stabilized | [ | |
| p27 | Represses Translation | [ | |
| TGF-β | Stabilized | [ | |
| TNF-α | Stabilized | [ | |
| VEGF | Stabilized | [ | |
| TTP | COX-2 | Destabilized | [ |
| GM-CSF | Destabilized | [ | |
| IL-1 | Destabilized | [ | |
| IL-6 | Destabilized | [ | |
| IL-8 | Destabilized | [ | |
| MMP-9 | Destabilized | [ | |
| TNF-α | Destabilized | [ | |
| VEGF | Destabilized | [ |
MK2 modulates the transcript stability and translation of various mRNAs (containing ARE in their 3′-UTRs) playing essential roles in various cellular and tumorigenic processes through RBP-mediated regulation as listed here. The list indicated in this table is not exhaustive but provides information about the important MK2-regulated transcripts. The numbers mentioned in brackets depict references for the same
Fig. 2Structure of MK2 and its isoforms. Figure presents the schematic representation of M2 (Isoform 1 and 2) structure with numbers highlighting the amino-acid (a.a.) residues of various domains. N-terminal contains a proline-rich region (10–40 a.a.) followed by catalytic kinase domain (64–325 a.a.) in both the isoforms. The larger isoform (isoform 1, 400 a.a.) consists of a nuclear export signal (NES) (356–365 a.a.) and a bipartite nuclear localization signal (NLS) (371–374 and 385–389 a.a.) located at the C-terminal region. The shorter isoform (isoform 2, 370 a.a.) on the other hand does not have the NES and NLS domain. Figure also clearly indicates that the region 354–370 of isoform 2 is different from isoform 1 (sequence alignment portrayed). The three phosphorylation sites of p38 have also been marked
Fig. 3MK2 variants. Pictorial representation of the chromosomal location of MK2 and its various variants is provided in the figure. Details of all the MK2 variants discovered so far has been provided for in-depth and detailed technical information. The chromosome map is based on Ensembl’s GRCh38.p10 ideogram
Fig. 4MK2 is the master regulator of tumorigenesis. The figure represents a list of MK2-regulated downstream substrates (with corresponding references highlighted in bracket) in various cellular pathways. The MK2 target genes represented here are play a vital role in cellular processes like cell cycle, inflammation, transcription, tumorigenesis and tumor microenvironment. The list is intended to be an illustration rather than being comprehensive
List of potent ATP competitive and non-competitive inhibitors of MK2 [151–162]
The list provided here is not comprehensive and is made using the most frequently cited inhibitors currently under investigation to design MK2-targeting therapeutics