| Literature DB >> 30992007 |
Yumei Li1, Feng Wu1, Qi Tan1, Mengfei Guo1, Pei Ma1, Xuan Wang1, Shuai Zhang1, Juanjuan Xu1, Ping Luo2, Yang Jin3.
Abstract
Forkhead box M1 (FOXM1), a transcriptional regulator of G1/S and G2/M transition and M phase progression in the cell cycle, plays a principal role in many physiological and pathological processes. A growing number of studies have focused on the relationship between abnormal FOXM1 expression and pulmonary diseases, such as lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, acute lung injury (ALI), pulmonary fibrosis, and pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). These studies indicate that the FOXM1 regulatory network is a major predictor of poor outcomes, especially in lung cancer, and provide novel insight into various pulmonary diseases. For the first time, this review summarizes the mechanistic relationship between FOXM1 dysregulation and pulmonary diseases, the benefits of targeting abnormal FOXM1 expression, and the questions that remain to be addressed in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Cell cycle; Cell proliferation; FOXM1; Pulmonary disease; Target therapy; Transcriptional regulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30992007 PMCID: PMC6469073 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-019-0347-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Fig. 2The FOXM1 regulatory network of lung cancer. Numerous oncogenic stimuli that initiate different signaling cascades ultimately contribute to a common program targeting FOXM1 transcription factor activity in lung tumor cells. FOXM1 transcriptional factor triggers various genes involved in many biological process, consequently facilitating tumor cells proliferation, DNA repair, invasion and metastasis, stemness and drug resistance, which altogether contribute to the development of lung cancer
Fig. 1Expression of FOXM1 of lung cancer in studies identified in the Oncomine database. One through nineteen represent the 19 studies on the expression of FOXM1 in lung cancer. The darker red indicates higher FOXM1 expression in the chips
The targets and functions of FOXM1 during the development of pulmonary disease
| Cell types | Direct targets | Regulatory role | Biological process | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alveolar epithelial cells | Cox-2 | Activate | Prostaglandin synthesis Pulmonary inflammation | [ |
| Stfpa Stfpb | Activate | Surfactant production Differentiation | [ | |
| Jnk1 Axin2 | Activate | Canonical Wnt signaling | [ | |
| Airway epithelium cells | Spdef | Activate | Mucus production Differentiation | [ |
| Clara cells | Sox-2 Scgb1a1 | Activate | Differentiation | [ |
| Cancer cells (epithelial origin) | TOPO-2a | Activate | DNA repair | [ |
| STMN1 | Activate | Metastasis | [ | |
| Snail1 | Activate | EMT | [ | |
| MMP2 | Activate | Metastasis | [ | |
| Vimentin MMP-9 | Activate | EMT | [ | |
| E-cadherin | Inhibit | EMT | [ | |
| Twist | Activate | EMT | [ | |
| Ikbkb Nfkb2 | Activate | NF-KB pathway | [ | |
| N-Myc Pttg1 Cdkn2a | Activate | JNK pathway | [ | |
| Endothelial cells | Ctnnb1(β-catenin) | Activate | Adherens junctions | [ |
| Flk-1 FoxF1 | Activate | Vascular formation Pulmonary inflammation | [ | |
| Sfrp1 | Activate | Canonical Wnt signaling | [ | |
| Fibroblasts | RAD51 BRCA2 | Activate | DNA repair | [ |
| Epithelial cells | Cyclin A Cyclin B | Activate | Cell cycle regulation | [ |
| Monocytes/Macrophages | CCR2 CX3CR1 | Activate | Recruitment of macrophages/monocytes to induce pulmonary inflammation | [ |
| Macrophages | HMMR (CD168) | Activate | Altered migratory cell behavior Pulmonary inflammation | [ |
| mDCs | GM-CSFR/CD86 MHCII | Activate | Antigen presentation | [ |
| Neutrophils | Eotaxins (CCL11,24) CX3CL1 | Activate | Chemoattraction | [ |
Fig. 3The mechanism regulation of FOXM1 in pulmonary fibrosis. In response to various stimulus, such as inflammatory mediators, radiation and mitogen, FOXM1 induces the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in alveolar type II epithelial cells, and activates fibroblasts. Elevated FOXM1 transcription in activated fibroblasts promote the fibroblast proliferation, differentiation and DNA repair, consequently accelerating the process of pulmonary fibrosis. EC: endothelial cell; SMC: smooth muscle cell; CXCL12: chemokine ligand 12; CXCR4: chemokine receptor type 4; ET-1: endothelin-1; IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor-1; MIF: macrophage migration inhibitory factor; NBS1: Nijmegen breakage syndrome 1; PDGF-B: platelet-derived growth factor -B; PGE2: prostaglandin E2; BRCA2: breast cancer-associated gene 2
Fig. 4FOXM1 promotes the initiation and progression of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Hypoxia, elevated growth factor and inflammatory cytokine from endothelial cells induces upregulated expression of FOXM1 in smooth muscle cells, and the increased FOXM1 targets on numerous pathways, such as inhibiting SMC apoptosis and differentiation, increasing SMC DNA repair and proliferation, consequently promoting vascular remodeling of PAH
FOXM1 transgenic mouse models used in the study of pulmonary diseases
| Mouse models | Expression of FOXM1 | Cells | Consequences of the models | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mx-Cre FOXM1−/− mice | Deletion | All cell types | 60% reduction in medium-sized (0.5–1 mm) lung adenomas; no large lung adenomas > 1 mm in size;84% of lung tumors exhibited strong FOXM1 nuclear positivity; 16% FOXM1-negative tumors were significantly smaller in size | [ |
| Rosa26-FOXM1 transgenic mice | Overexpression | All cell types | Persistent pulmonary inflammation increased the total number and diameter of lung adenomas | [ |
| SPC–rtTAtg/−/ TetO-Cretg/−/FOXM1fl/fl mice | Conditional knockout | Specifically in lung epithelial cells | Reduced the number (5-fold) and size of lung tumors prior to or even after tumor initiation | [ |
| SP-C–rtTAtg/− / tetOFOXM1-ΔNtg/− mice termed epiFOXM1-ΔN mice | Activated FOXM1-ΔN mutant | Epithelial cells | Enhanced radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis | [ |
| SPC-rtTA/TetO-KrasG12D | Mutant KrasG12Dtranscript | Respiratory epithelial cells | Activated Kras alone is sufficient to induce formation of lung adenocarcinomas | [ |
| SPC-rtTA/TetO-GFP-FOXM1-ΔN/TetO-Kras mice, termed epFOXM1/ep Kras | Activated FOXM1-ΔN mutant and Kras | Respiratory epithelial cells | Tumor sizes are larger than those in epKras mice; FOXM1-ΔN cooperates with activated Kras to accelerate lung tumor growth | [ |
| epKrasG12D/epFOXM1−/− mice | Mutant KrasG12D transcript but deletion of FOXM1 | Lung epithelial cells | Prevented the initiation of lung tumors; reduced the number and size of lung tumors; single lung tumors were positive for FOXM1 | [ |
| Tie2-Cre/FOXM1fl/fl mice termed enFOXM1−/− mice | Deletion | Endothelial cells | Increased lung inflammation and activation of canonical Wnt signaling; increased the lung tumor number and size | [ |
| CCSP-rtTA/ TetO-GFP-FOXM1-ΔN mice, termed CCSP-FOXM1 mice | Activated FOXM1-ΔN mutant | Clara cells | Induced airway hyperplasia at sites expressing the transgene | [ |
| CCSP-FOXM1−/− mice | Conditional deletion | Clara cells | Reduced pulmonary inflammation and decreased airway resistance after HDM challenge | [ |
| FOXM1fl/fl Col1a2-Cre-ER (T)+/0 mice | Selective deletion | Activated fibroblasts | Reduced alveolar infiltration and collagen deposition; attenuated bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis even during the fibrotic phase | [ |
| sm-FOXM1+/− mice | Constitutive knockdown | Smooth muscle cells | Inhibited hypoxia-induced PH and reversed existing vessel remodeling in hypoxic mice | [ |
| sm-FOXM1−/− mice | Knockout | Smooth muscle cells | Induced embryonic lethality in mice | [ |
| LysM-Cre/FOXM−/−mice | Deletion | Myeloid-derived inflammatory cells | Reduced pulmonary inflammation and airway resistance after HDM challenge | [ |