| Literature DB >> 31122251 |
Yitao Gong1,2,3,4, Zhiyao Fan1,2,3,4, Guopei Luo1,2,3,4, Chao Yang1,2,3,4, Qiuyi Huang1,2,3,4, Kun Fan1,2,3,4, He Cheng1,2,3,4, Kaizhou Jin1,2,3,4, Quanxing Ni1,2,3,4, Xianjun Yu5,6,7,8, Chen Liu9,10,11,12.
Abstract
Apoptosis resistance is to a large extent a major obstacle leading to chemotherapy failure during cancer treatment. Bypassing the apoptotic pathway to induce cancer cell death is considered to be a promising approach to overcoming this problem. Necroptosis is a regulated necrotic cell death modality in a caspase-independent fashion and is mainly mediated by Receptor-Interacting Protein 1 (RIP1), RIP3, and Mixed Lineage Kinase Domain-Like (MLKL). Necroptosis serves as an alternative mode of programmed cell death overcoming apoptosis resistance and may trigger and amplify antitumor immunity in cancer therapy.The role of necroptosis in cancer is complicated. The expression of key regulators of the necroptotic pathway is generally downregulated in cancer cells, suggesting that cancer cells may also evade necroptosis to survive; however, in certain types of cancer, the expression level of key mediators is elevated. Necroptosis can elicit strong adaptive immune responses that may defend against tumor progression; however, the recruited inflammatory response may also promote tumorigenesis and cancer metastasis, and necroptosis may generate an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Necroptosis also reportedly promotes oncogenesis and cancer metastasis despite evidence demonstrating its antimetastatic role in cancer. In addition, necroptotic microenvironments can direct lineage commitment to determine cancer subtype development in liver cancer. A plethora of compounds and drugs targeting necroptosis exhibit potential antitumor efficacy, but their clinical feasibility must be validated.Better knowledge of the necroptotic pathway mechanism and its physiological and pathological functions is urgently required to solve the remaining mysteries surrounding the role of necroptosis in cancer. In this review, we briefly introduce the molecular mechanism and characteristics of necroptosis, the interplay between necroptosis and other cell death mechanisms, crosstalk of necroptosis and metabolic signaling and detection methods. We also summarize the intricate role of necroptosis in tumor progression, cancer metastasis, prognosis of cancer patients, cancer immunity regulation, cancer subtype determination and cancer therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Autophagy; Immunosuppression; Metastasis; Mixed lineage kinase domain-like pseudokinase (MLKL); Necroptosis; Receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIPK); Therapeutics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31122251 PMCID: PMC6532150 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-019-1029-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Key mediators in necroptosis and their key function
| Key Mediators | Function in necroptosis | Inhibitors | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| RIP1 | determining the survival or death of cell; recruiting and activating RIPK3 to form necrosome | nec-1 | [ |
| RIPK3 | interacting with RIPK1 to form necrosome; phosphorylating MLKL | GSK843 and GSK872 | [ |
| MLKL | phosphorylated by RIPK3; oligomerized and translocated to plasma membrane to execute necroptosis | NSA | [ |
| cIAP1/2 | polyubiquitinating RIPK1 to induce NF-κB signaling | smac mimetics | [ |
| CYLD | deubiquitinating RIPK1; promoting “Ripoptosome” formation; promoting necrosome formation | – | [ |
| caspase-8 | cleaving RIPK1 and RIPK3 and activating apoptosis; inhibiting necrosome formation; cleaving CYLD to promote cell survival | zVAD-fmk | [ |
Fig. 1TNF necroptosis signaling mechanism
Expression of necroptotic factors in cancer and its influence on cancer prognosis
| Cancer Type | Expression of Necroptotic Factors | The Influence on Prognosis | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast Cancer | decreased RIPK3 expression | worse prognosis | [ |
| Colorectal Cancer | decreased RIPK3 expression; decreased MLKL expression | reduced DFS and OS; reduced OS | [ |
| Acute Myeloid Leukemia | decreased RIPK3 expression | accelerated leukemogenesis and worse survival | [ |
| Melanoma | decreased RIPK3 expression; decreased CYLD expression | not mentioned; enhanced tumor progression and metastasis | [ |
| Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma | decreased RIPK1 expression | enhanced tumorigenesis | [ |
| Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia | decreased CYLD expression | reduced OS | [ |
| Glioblastoma | increased RIPK1 expression | worse prognosis | [ |
| Lung Cancer | increased RIPK1 expression | promoted oncogenesis | [ |
| Pancreatic Cancer | increased expression of RIPK1, RIPK3, FADD and MLKL | promoted oncogenesis | [ |
| Gastric Cancer | decreased MLKL expression | reduced OS | [ |
| Ovarian Cancer | Decreased MLKL expression | reduced OS | [ |
| Cervical Squamous Cell Carcinoma | decreased MLKL expression | reduced OS | [ |
Fig. 2Role of necroptosis in cancer immunity
Compounds that induce necroptosis in cancer therapy
| Compounds and Agents | Category | Mechanisms of Necroptosis Induction | Cancer Type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shikonin | naphthoquinone | ROS production; RIPK1/RIPK3 necrosome formation | leukemia; osteosarcoma; pancreatic cancer; glioma | [ |
| Staurosporine | alkaloid | RIPK1/MLKL dependent | leukemia | [ |
| Neoalbaconol | albatrellus confluens extract | autocrine secretion of TNFα; remodeling cellular energy metabolism | nasopharyngeal carcinoma | [ |
| Resibufogenin | bufadienolide | upregulating RIPK3 and MLKL protein | colorectal cancer | [ |
| Radiotherapy | radiation | inhibition of caspase-8 activation | thyroid cancer; adrenocortical cancer; colorectal cancer cells; glioblastoma | [ |
| 5-FU | chemotherapeutic agent | TNF-α production; RIPK1 activation | colorectal cancer | [ |
| B12536 | polo-like kinase inhibitor | leading to mitotic catastrophe | prostate cancer | [ |
| Compound C | AMP-activated protein kinase inhibitor | Calpain/Cathepsin-mediated | glioma | [ |
| Sorafenib | multikinase inhibitor | ROS production; RIPK1 activation | multiple myeloma; Hodgkin’s lymphoma | [ |
| Aurora Kinase A Inhibitor | Aurora Kinase Inhibitor | facilitating necrosome activation | pancreatic cancer | [ |
| TRAIL | death receptor ligand | TNFR1 signaling; RIPK1/RIPK3 dependent;ROS production | colon cancer; liver cancer; pancreatic cancer | [ |
| CD95L | death receptor ligand | CD95 signalling; regulation of cIAPs | pancreatic cancer | [ |
| Oncolytic viruses | virus | exposure of immunogenic molecules | glioma; ovarian cancer | [ |
| Hemagglutinating virus | virus | calcium-calmodulin kinase II dependent | neuroblastoma | [ |
| Silver nanoparticles | metal nanoparticle | RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL dependent | pancreatic cancer | [ |
| Selenium nanoparticles | metal nanoparticle | RIPK1 dependent | prostate cancer | [ |
| Smac mimetics | IAP antagonist | ROS production; cIAP inhibition; TNFα dependent | leukemia; pancreatic cancer | [ |
| MG132 and bortezomib | proteasome inhibitors | RHIM-dependent | leukemia | [ |
| Obatoclax | Bcl-2 inhibitor | Atg5-dependent necrosome assembly on autophagosomes | rhabdomyosarcoma; ALL | [ |
| PolyI:C | viral dsRNA analog | RIPK3 dependent; TLR3/TLR4 activation | cervical cancer; colon cancer | [ |
| ZZW-115 | NUPR1 inhibitors | inducing mitochondrial metabolism rupture | pancreatic cancer | [ |