| Literature DB >> 31137886 |
Santina Venuto1,2, Giuseppe Merla3.
Abstract
The cell cycle is a series of events by which cellular components are accurately segregated into daughter cells, principally controlled by the oscillating activities of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and their co-activators. In eukaryotes, DNA replication is confined to a discrete synthesis phase while chromosome segregation occurs during mitosis. During mitosis, the chromosomes are pulled into each of the two daughter cells by the coordination of spindle microtubules, kinetochores, centromeres, and chromatin. These four functional units tie chromosomes to the microtubules, send signals to the cells when the attachment is completed and the division can proceed, and withstand the force generated by pulling the chromosomes to either daughter cell. Protein ubiquitination is a post-translational modification that plays a central role in cellular homeostasis. E3 ubiquitin ligases mediate the transfer of ubiquitin to substrate proteins determining their fate. One of the largest subfamilies of E3 ubiquitin ligases is the family of the tripartite motif (TRIM) proteins, whose dysregulation is associated with a variety of cellular processes and directly involved in human diseases and cancer. In this review we summarize the current knowledge and emerging concepts about TRIMs and their contribution to the correct regulation of cell cycle, describing how TRIMs control the cell cycle transition phases and their involvement in the different functional units of the mitotic process, along with implications in cancer progression.Entities:
Keywords: TRIMs; cancer; cell cycle; mitosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31137886 PMCID: PMC6562728 DOI: 10.3390/cells8050510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Tripartite motifs (TRIMs) regulate specific stages of cell cycle and mitosis. (a) Schematic representation of the cell cycle. Each of the main phases of the cell cycle—G1, S (when DNA synthesis occurs), G2 and mitosis—is controlled by CDKs, together with their regulatory partner proteins, the cyclins. Different phases of the cell cycle require different cyclins and the coordination between CDKs levels and the respective checkpoints prevent the entry into the following phase until cellular or genetic defects are repaired. (b) The critical and major TRIMs responsible of cell cycle phase transitions (up) and mitotic progression (down) are schematically represented within the phases they specifically are involved in.
TRIMs’ roles in cancer. TRIM family members that control cell cycle progression have different role in controlling cancer development and progression.
| TRIM | Type of Cancer | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TRIM2 | ccRCC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM3 | CC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| HCC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM8 | GM | tumor suppressor | [ |
| RCC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| ATC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM11 | PC | oncogene | [ |
| OC | oncogene | [ | |
| LC | oncogene | [ | |
| HCC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM14 | OS | oncogene | [ |
| GC | oncogene | [ | |
| CRC | oncogene | [ | |
| GBM | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM15 | GADC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| CRC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM16 | NB, LC, SC, BC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| HCC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| OC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM23 | GC | oncogene | [ |
| TRIM24 | CRC | oncogene | [ |
| TRIM25 | CRC | oncogene | [ |
| PC | oncogene | [ | |
| GC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM26 | HCC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM27 | CRC | oncogene | [ |
| IDC | oncogene | [ | |
| OC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM28 | GM | oncogene | [ |
| PC | oncogene | [ | |
| HCC | oncogene | [ | |
| BC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM29 | CRC | oncogene | [ |
| NSCLC | oncogene | [ | |
| LC | oncogene | [ | |
| GC | oncogene | [ | |
| SCC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM31 | HCC | oncogene | [ |
| TRIM32 | LC | oncogene | [ |
| GC | oncogene | [ | |
| NB | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM36 | PC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM37 | GM | oncogene | [ |
| TRIM44 | CRC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| PTC | oncogene | [ | |
| PC | oncogene | [ | |
| BC | oncogene | [ | |
| NSCLC | oncogene | [ | |
| TGCT | oncogene | [ | |
| HEC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM45 | GM | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM47 | CRC | oncogene | [ |
| PC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM50 | HCC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM52 | GM | tumor suppressor | [ |
| OC | oncogene | [ | |
| HCC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM58 | LADC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| CRC | tumor suppressor | [ | |
| TRIM59 | NSCLC | oncogene | [ |
| CCA | oncogene | [ | |
| BC | oncogene | [ | |
| EOC | oncogene | [ | |
| RCC | oncogene | [ | |
| Bca | oncogene | [ | |
| CRC | oncogene | [ | |
| OS | oncogene | [ | |
| PC | oncogene | [ | |
| CC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM62 | AML | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM65 | UCB | oncogene | [ |
| TRIM66 | OS | oncogene | [ |
| NSCLC | oncogene | [ | |
| TRIM68 | CRC | tumor suppressor | [ |
| TRIM71 | NSCLC | oncogene | [ |
ccRCC: clear cells renal carcinoma; CC: cervical cancer; HCC: hepatocellular carcinoma; GM: glioma; RCC: renal cell carcinoma; ATC: anaplastic thyroid carcinoma; PC: prostate cancer; OC: ovarian cancer; LC: lung cancer; OS: osteosarcoma; GC: gastric cancer; CRC: colorectal cancer; GBM: glioblastoma; GADC: gastric adenocarcinoma; NB: neuroblastoma; SC: skin cancer; BC: breast cancer; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; IDC: intraductal carcinoma; SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; PTC: papillary thyroid cancer; TGCT: testicular germ cell tumor; HEC: human esophageal cancer; LADC: lung adenocarcinoma; CCA: cholangiocarcinoma; EOC: epithelyal ovarian cancer; Bca: bladder cancer; AML: acute myelod leukemia; UCB: bladder urothelial carcinoma).