| Literature DB >> 31546746 |
Miguel Sánchez-Álvarez1, Raffaele Strippoli2,3, Massimo Donadelli4, Alexandr V Bazhin5,6, Marco Cordani7.
Abstract
: The regulation of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) levels and the contribution therein from networks regulating cell metabolism, such as autophagy and the mTOR-dependent nutrient-sensing pathway, constitute major targets for selective therapeutic intervention against several types of tumors, due to their extensive rewiring in cancer cells as compared to healthy cells. Here, we discuss the sestrin family of proteins-homeostatic transducers of oxidative stress, and drivers of antioxidant and metabolic adaptation-as emerging targets for pharmacological intervention. These adaptive regulators lie at the intersection of those two priority nodes of interest in antitumor intervention-ROS control and the regulation of cell metabolism and autophagy-therefore, they hold the potential not only for the development of completely novel compounds, but also for leveraging on synergistic strategies with current options for tumor therapy and classification/stadiation to achieve personalized medicine.Entities:
Keywords: ROS; Sestrins; autophagy; cancer therapy; nutrient management; stress response
Year: 2019 PMID: 31546746 PMCID: PMC6827145 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11101415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Sestrins as master regulators of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) management. Sestrins expression is induced upon oxidative stress and leads to antioxidant response. Increased ROS levels in cells activate ROS-responsive genes including transcription factors AP-1, FOXOs, HIF-1/2 and p53, which in turn induce the transcription of SESNs genes. SESNs coordinate antioxidant responses by activating Nrf-2, a transcription factor leading expression of Nrf-2 target antioxidant genes. In addition, SESNs orchestrate ROS homeostasis by inhibiting mTORC1, leading to oxidative stress.
Figure 2Similarity and differences between members of the sestrin family. SESN1, SESN2 and SESN3 activate antioxidant and pro-autophagic responses by modulating mTORC1 and AMPK signaling pathways, as well as through a positive impact on major antioxidant effectors such as Srxs and Prxs (through mechanisms poorly identified) [37,56,64]. However, some differences between SESNs occur at a biochemical level. Indeed, some of them directly interact with specific effectors. SESN1 and SENS2 (but not SESN3) interact with Keap1 to promote its autophagic degradation [62]. All three SESNs interact with GATOR2 to negatively regulate mTORC1 [54,62,68]. SESN1 and SESN2 are activated by p53 to modulate mTOR signaling [37,64,66]. SESN2 and SESN3, but not SESN1 interact physically with mTORC2 to modulate Akt signaling [79]. SESN2 interacts with leucine to negatively regulate mTORC1 [79].
Figure 3Sestrins (SESNs) as a therapeutical management of cancer. Natural compounds or synthetic therapeutics lead to changes in SESNs expression in a manner dependent on the type of drug, the target tissue and the metabolic status of cancer cells. Enhanced SESNs expression might result in autophagy activation, leading alternatively to cell death or survival in cancer cells, depending on the differentially induced autophagic program. Some drugs may also reduce sestrins expression in cancer cells, leading to ROS enhancement, mitochondria damage and apoptotic cell death.
Major current cancer treatments modulating SESNs expression.
| Entry | Therapeutic Approach | Cell Lines | Type of Cancer | Effect on SESNs | Molecular Mechanisms | Biological Effect | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Quercetin | HCT116, | Colon cancer | SESN2 ↑ | mTOR ↓, AMPK/p38 ↑ | ROS, apoptosis, cell death | [ |
| 2 | Cucurbitacin B | A549, H1792, H1650, H1975 | Lung cancer | SESN3 ↑ | PI3K/mTOR ↓, STAT-3 ↓ AMPKα ↑ | Anti-proliferative, apoptosis | [ |
| 3 | Eupatilin | HepG2 | Liver cancer | SESN2 ↑ | Autophagy and antioxidant genes ↑ | Protective autophagy, reduction ROS, hepatoprotection | [ |
| 4 | Isorhapontigenin | UMUC3, T24T, HeLa | Bladder, cervix cancer | SESN2 ↑ | MAPK8-Jun | Autophagy, inhibition of cell growth | [ |
| 5 | Arsenic trioxide | U87MG, patients derived glioma cells, A549, H1299 | Glioma, lung cancer | SESN2 ↑ | miR-182-5p ↓ | Antioxidant response, increased patient survival | [ |
| 6 | Resveratrol | HepG2 | Liver cancer | SESN2 ↑ | LXRα-SREBP-1c ↓ | Inhibition of hepatic lipogenesis | [ |
| 7 | Carnosol | HCT116, SW480 | Colon cancer | SESN2 ↑ | PERK/Nrf2/SESN2↑ | Reduction of cell viability, apoptosis, | [ |
| 8 | Tanshinone IIA | 43B, MG63 | Osteosarcoma | SESN2↑ | MAP4K4 SAPK/JNK1/Jun kinase↑, | Anchorage-independent growth inhibition; osteosarcoma progression; mitochondrial dysfunction, | [ |
| 9 | Cabazitaxel | C4-2AT6 | Prostate cancer | SESN3 ↓ | Cleaved-PARP ↑ | ROS, citotoxicity | [ |
| 10 | Bortezomib, Nelfinavir | MDA-MB-453, OVCAR3, HeLa | Breast, ovarian, cervix cancer | SESN2 ↑ | ATF4, ATF3, CHOP ↑ | Autophagy, ER stress, Proteasome inhibition | [ |
| 11 | Suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, trichostatin A, depsipeptide | HCT116, HepG2 | Lung, liver cancer | SESN3 ↑ | FOXO1 ↑, mTOR ↓ | Protective autophagy | [ |
| 12 | Tyrosine kinase inhibitors | BV173, BV173R, Ba/F3 p210T315I, U937, KT-1 | Leukemia | SESN3 ↑ | mTORC1 ↓ | Antileukemic response | [ |
| 13 | Topotecan | A549, HeLa | Lung, cervix cancer | SESN2 ↑ | PTEN nuclear translocation, p-Jun-SESN2-AMPK ↑ | Autophagy | [ |
| 14 | External beam radiation therapy | Prostate cancer | SESN3 ↓ | AMPK-mTORC1↓ | Mitophagy, | [ | |
| 15 | Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazine (CCCP) | SH-SY5Y | Neuroblastoma | SESN2 ↑ (early time) | RBX1 mediated ubiquitination | Protection from mitochondrial damage | [ |
| 16 | 2-imino-6-methoxy-2H-chromene-3-carbothioamide (IMCA) | TT | Thyroid cancer | SESN1 ↑, | AMPK ↑ | Inhibition of cell proliferation, | [ |
| 17 | 3,4,5,4′-tetramethoxystilbene (DMU-212) | A-2780, SKOV-3 | Ovarian cancer | SESNs ↑ | P53 signaling ↑ | Apoptosis induction, | [ |
| 18 | Ultraviolet radiations (UVA, UVB) | NHEM, iMC23 | Melanoma | SESN2 ↑ | P53 and AKT3 pathway | Inhibition of UVB-induced DNA damage repair; | [ |
| 19 | ChlA-F | RT4, T24T, UMUC3 | Bladder cancer | SESN2 ↑ | Autophagy signaling ↑ | Anchorage-independent growth inhibition | [ |
Table summarizing literature on chemotherapeutics targeting expression levels and/or function of SESNs in different tumor cell lines and cancer types. Impact on either aspect of SESN biology is denoted as ↑ (increased SESN expression or increased downstream function) and ↓ (decreased SESN expression level or attenuated downstream function). Specific consequences for tumor cell survival is indicated when available.