| Literature DB >> 31521169 |
Shuaishuai Xu1,2,3,4, Huaxiang Xu1,2,3,4, Wenquan Wang1,2,3,4, Shuo Li1,2,3,4, Hao Li1,2,3,4, Tianjiao Li1,2,3,4, Wuhu Zhang1,2,3,4, Xianjun Yu5,6,7,8, Liang Liu9,10,11,12.
Abstract
Collagen is the major component of the tumor microenvironment and participates in cancer fibrosis. Collagen biosynthesis can be regulated by cancer cells through mutated genes, transcription factors, signaling pathways and receptors; furthermore, collagen can influence tumor cell behavior through integrins, discoidin domain receptors, tyrosine kinase receptors, and some signaling pathways. Exosomes and microRNAs are closely associated with collagen in cancer. Hypoxia, which is common in collagen-rich conditions, intensifies cancer progression, and other substances in the extracellular matrix, such as fibronectin, hyaluronic acid, laminin, and matrix metalloproteinases, interact with collagen to influence cancer cell activity. Macrophages, lymphocytes, and fibroblasts play a role with collagen in cancer immunity and progression. Microscopic changes in collagen content within cancer cells and matrix cells and in other molecules ultimately contribute to the mutual feedback loop that influences prognosis, recurrence, and resistance in cancer. Nanoparticles, nanoplatforms, and nanoenzymes exhibit the expected gratifying properties. The pathophysiological functions of collagen in diverse cancers illustrate the dual roles of collagen and provide promising therapeutic options that can be readily translated from bench to bedside. The emerging understanding of the structural properties and functions of collagen in cancer will guide the development of new strategies for anticancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Collagen; Mutated genes; Prognosis; Resistance; Signaling pathways; Therapy; Tumor microenvironment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31521169 PMCID: PMC6744664 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-019-2058-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1The contribution of collagen to cancer cells
Fig. 2The complexity between collagen and the extracellular matrix. Multiple stromal cells and the extracellular matrix play important roles in stimulating or inhibiting collagen functions via different pathways in cancer progression. Collagen-rich extracellular matrices can bind to other molecules to form dense fibrosis, which induces an anoxic environment and changes the condition of new blood vessels. The behavior of cancer cells is also closely related to collagen. This process also affects the activity and localization of innate and adaptive immune cells
Pathological functions of MMPs associated with collagen in cancer
| Subtype of MMPs | Associated collagen | Pathological functions of collagen | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| MMP-1 | COLI | Regulated to facilitate melanoma cell growth and invasion | [ |
| COLIV | Regulated to foster breast cancer cell invasion in response to prolactin | [ | |
| MMP-2 | COLI | Modulating MMP-2 activation in osteosarcoma | [ |
| COL4A2 | Modulating MMP-2 activation and activity in liver cancer | [ | |
| COLI and COLIV | Regulated by the knockdown of MMP-2 to induce cancer metastases | [ | |
| Collagen organization | Regulated to enhance malignant glioma recurrence and resistance to vemurafenib | [ | |
| MMP-3 | COLI | Regulated to induce mammary epithelial cells invasion and morphogenesis with chaperone heat-shock protein 90 | [ |
| COL11A1 | Regulated to promote ovarian cancer progression | [ | |
| MMP-7 | COLI | Both to predict the prognosis of opisthorchiasis-associated cholangiocarcinoma | [ |
| MMP-9 | COLI | Degraded in invasive melanoma fronts | [ |
| COLI | Potentiated in | [ | |
| COLIV | Degraded to facilitate venous invasion in PDAC | [ | |
| MMP-10 | COLI | Regulated by TGF-β in keratinocytes to promote invasion | [ |
| MMP-14 | COLI | Increased to promote fibrosis by TGF-β signaling in PDAC | [ |
| COLI | Modulating MMP-2 and MMP-14 activation via β1 integrin | [ | |
| COLI | Regulated to prevent apoptosis to promote luminal-like breast cancer progression | [ | |
| COLI | Sustained activation of MMP-14 with EGFR at the cell surface enhances invasion, whereas growth within three-dimensional collagen is inhibited | [ | |
| MMP-16 | COLI | Supported around melanoma cells to enhance lymphatic invasion | [ |
| MMP-28 | COLII | interacted to more adhesion and less migratory | [ |
Collagen as a prognostic factor for cancer patients
| Subtype | Condition | Cancer | Associated clinical significance | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COLI | Intactness | Colorectal cancer | Changes dynamically at stages I to IV, peaking at stage II | [ |
| Intactness | Prostate cancer | Metastasis | [ | |
| COL1A1 | Breast cancer | Development and progression along with COL3A1 and COL4A1 | [ | |
| COL1A2 | Colorectal cancer | Proliferation, migration, and invasion | [ | |
| COL1A2 | Hepatocellular cancer | Metastasis | [ | |
| N-terminal telopeptide | NSCLC | Overall survival | [ | |
| N-terminal telopeptide | Head and neck SCC | Overall survival along with N-terminal telopeptide of COLIII | [ | |
| Pyridinoline crosslinked C-terminal telopeptide (serum) | Breast cancer | Recurrence | [ | |
| N-terminal telopeptide (urine) | Breast cancer with bone metastases | Survival prognosis with zoledronic acid treatment for 3 months | [ | |
| COLII | COL2A1 | High-grade serous ovarian cancer | Recurrence | [ |
| COL2A1 | Chondrosarcoma | Frequent mutations | [ | |
| COLIII | COL3A1 | Breast cancer | Irregular margin status and mitotic activity | [ |
| COLIV | Intactness | Advanced gastric carcinoma | The depth of wall penetration and stage | [ |
| Intactness | Oral SCC | Positive lymph node status | [ | |
| Intactness | Colorectal cancer | Liver metastases | [ | |
| 7S domain (serum) | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Intractable ascites | [ | |
| COL4A1 | PDAC | Aggressive progression | [ | |
| COL4A1 (urine) | Bladder cancer | Recurrence | [ | |
| COL4A3 | Gastric carcinomas | Cancer size, lymphatic invasion, venous invasion, TNM stage, and histologically distinction | [ | |
| COLV | Intactness | Resected NSCLC | Overall survival | [ |
| COLVI | COL6A1 | Cervical cancer | Overall and recurrent-free survival | [ |
| COLXI | COL11A1 | Esophageal SCC | Advanced clinical stage and lymph node metastases | [ |
| COLXIII | COL13A1 (urine) | Bladder cancer | Recurrence | [ |
| COLXVII | Intactness | Colorectal cancer | Invasion and metastasis | [ |
| Intactness | SCC | Invasion | [ | |
| Intactness | Colon cancer | Metastasis | [ | |
| COLXXIII | Intactness (tissue and urine) | NSCLC | Recurrence | [ |
Fig. 3The value of collagen in clinical applications
Typical inhibitors and drugs that regulate collagen biosynthesized processes and collagen distribution arrangement in cancer studies
| Effects of inhibitors | Targeted sites of inhibitors | Typical inhibitors and drugs | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interfering collagen biosynthesis enzymes | Collagen genes | MiR-129-5p, MiR-29b, MiR-384 | [ |
| Prolyl 4-hydroxylase | Budesonide, catechol, | [ | |
| Heat shock protein 90 | 1G6-D7, dipalmitoyl-radicicol, 17-DMAG, ganetespib | [ | |
| Heat shock protein 47 | MiR-29, 1,3-dimethylol-5-FU, AK778, pirfenidone, terutroban | [ | |
| Matrix metalloproteinases | Gallium complex GS2, isoflavonoids, bisphosphonates | [ | |
| Lysyl oxidases | Beta-aminopropionitrile | [ | |
| Disturbing cancer cell signaling pathways | Snail transcription factors | Toosendanin, ponicidin, ferulic acid | [ |
| Hypoxia‐inducible factor | Tamoxifen, 28- | [ | |
| STAT3 signaling pathway | VS-4718, stattic, ruxolitinib, S3I-201 | [ | |
| TGF‐β signaling pathway | LY2157299 monohydrate, trabedersen, fresolimumab, galunisertib | [ | |
| NF‐κB signaling pathway | Honokiol, aspirin, ormeloxifene | [ | |
| AKT signaling pathway | Quetiapine, pirfenidone | [ | |
| Notch signaling pathway | Rovalpituzumab tesirine, taladegib, crenigacestat, MiR-148a | [ | |
| Hedgehog signaling pathway | Itraconazole, sonidegib, vismodegib | [ | |
| RAS signaling pathway | Perindopril, losartan | [ | |
| Tyrosine kinase receptor | Bevacizumab, imatinib, ponatinib, dasatinib | [ | |
| Discoidin domain receptor | WRG-28, 7rh, AZD0156 | [ | |
| G protein family receptor | AT13148, KD025, Azaindole 1, chelerythrine | [ | |
| Integrin | Cilengitide, volociximab, intetumumab, LM609 | [ | |
| Mediating tumor matrix components | Macrophage | Bone-marrow-derived macrophages infusion | [ |
| T cell | Tumor-targeted trimeric 4-1BB-agonistic antibody | [ | |
| Cancer-associated fibroblasts | ABT-199, 5-AZA, ismodegib, metformin, Nab-paclitaxel | [ | |
| Hyaluronic acid | Halofuginone | [ | |
| Directly utilizing collagenase | Collagen antibody | Collagen-binding EGFR single-chain Fv antibody fragment | [ |
| Nanoparticle | Poly-lactic- | [ | |
| Oncolytic adenovirus | oH(E)mT-DCN, LOAd703 | [ |
Collagen-targeted agents directly influencing collagen content and distribution in clinical trials for cancers
| Drug | Combination drugs | Cancer | Phase | Status | Result | Reference number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LDE225 | Gemcitabine, Nab-paclitaxel | Locally Advanced or Metastasized Pancreatic Cancer | I/II | Unknown | NCT02358161 | |
| EN3835 | None | Uterine Leiomyoma | I | Completed | Enough safety and efficacy, and decreased tumor bulk | NCT02889848 |
| EN3835 | None | Lipoma | II | Completed | dose escalation study | NCT01613313 |
| Losartan | Proton beam radiation, FOLFIRINOX | Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT01821729 | |
| TRC093 | None | Locally Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumors | I | Completed | Dose escalation study | NCT00492830 |
| Halofuginone hydrobromide | None | Human immunodeficiency virus-related Kaposi’s sarcoma | II | Completed | No clear clinical benefits | NCT00064142 |