| Literature DB >> 31817939 |
Jasmine Wyatt1, Manuel M Müller2, Mahvash Tavassoli1.
Abstract
Cell death is a tightly regulated process which can be exploited in cancer treatment to drive the killing of the tumour. Several conventional cancer therapies including chemotherapeutic agents target pathways involved in cell death, yet they often fail due to the lack of selectivity they have for tumour cells over healthy cells. Over the past decade, research has demonstrated the existence of numerous proteins which have an intrinsic tumour-specific toxicity, several of which originate from viruses. These tumour-selective viral proteins, although from distinct backgrounds, have several similar and interesting properties. Though the mechanism(s) of action of these proteins are not fully understood, it is possible that they can manipulate several cell death modes in cancer exemplifying the intricate interplay between these pathways. This review will discuss our current knowledge on the topic and outstanding questions, as well as deliberate the potential for viral proteins to progress into the clinic as successful cancer therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptin; Apoptosis; Cancer; E1A; E4orf4; NS1
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817939 PMCID: PMC6966515 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11121975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Table detailing the known viral oncotoxic proteins, as well as the year this virus was isolated and the current therapeutic status.
| Protein | Viral Origin | Year Isolated | Therapeutic Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apoptin | Chicken Anaemia Virus | 1979 [ | Preclinical stage |
| Human Gyrovirus | 2011 [ | Preclinical stage | |
| Taip | Torque Teno Virus | 1997 [ | Little preclinical evidence |
| Ns1 | Parvovirus H1 | 1960 [ | Clinical trial phase II |
| Mice Minute Virus | 1966 [ | Preclinical stage | |
| E4orf4 | Adenovirus | 1953 [ | Clinical trial phase III |
| E1a | Adenovirus |
Figure 1The key domains and sequences of the viral proteins discussed in this review. Post-translational modifications occur in the form of phosphorylation. All are thought to be intrinsically disordered, except for the much larger NS1 which known to have a distinct folded N-terminus (residues 1–255).
Summary of the known post-translation modifications (phosphorylation) that occur on viral proteins once expressed in transformed cells. * Isoform not yet confirmed.
| Protein | Modification | Enzyme | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| CAV-Apoptin | T 106, 107 and 108 | PKCβ1 | [ |
| T 56 | Cdk1/2 | [ | |
| NS1 | T435, S473 | PKCλ | [ |
| S283, T403, T585 S588 | PKC * | [ | |
| E1A | S89, S96, S132 and S219 | Unknown | [ |
| S185 and S188 | MAPK | [ | |
| S132 | CkII | [ | |
| E4orf4 | Y26, Y42 and Y59 | Src kinases | [ |
Comparison of the main characteristics that may contribute to tumour-selective cell death mediated by the viral proteins discussed in this review.
| Characteristics | Apoptin | Ns1 | E4orf4 | E1a |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intrinsically disordered structure | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| PTM’s in the form of phosphorylation | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Nuclear localisation | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Multimerization | Yes | Yes | Unknown | Yes |
| P53-Independent Death | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Activation of Caspases | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Cytoskeleton Re-Arrangement | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Alterations in PI3K pathway | Yes | Unknown | Yes | Yes |
| DNA interactions | Yes | Yes | Unknown | Unknown |
Figure 2Schematic showing the numerous cellular events which are altered by viral proteins in transformed cells (see key bottom right corner). All tumour-selective viral proteins undergo PTM’s in the form of phosphorylation to become active. This occurs by kinases which may be upregulated in cancer, however the exact kinases may vary between cell-type. Proteins can freely translocate between the nucleus and the cytoplasm via the nuclear localisation and export sequences they all contain. PTM may impair this nuclear transport (evidence shown at least for Apoptin which builds up in the nucleus of cancer cells). Viral proteins can multimerise although it is unclear whether this happens in specific cellular compartments. The figure uses apoptin as an example, which tends to multimerise in the nucleus where it accumulates in aggregates. Components of the parallel apoptosis pathways (intrinsic and extrinsic) can be activated by most of the viral proteins discussed. Collectively though, they all result in some form of caspase activation which typically results in downstream activation of convergent pathways leading to apoptosis. Uniquely, Apoptin can promote the abnormal translocation of Nur77 from the nucleus to the mitochondria, leading to MOMP and thus activation of the intrinsic cell death pathway. Non-canonical modes of cell death may also appear in different forms, which can be altered by viral proteins and will naturally feed into the classical apoptosis pathways further downstream. This includes perturbations of the cell cycle, which could occur when some viral proteins interact with the APC/C. These proteins can all also promote cytoskeleton remodelling through interactions with different family members of Rho GTPases, as well as disrupting/activating growth factor signalling pathways. Overall, the landscape of tumour-selective cell death induced by these viral proteins is extremely complex and probably does not occur through a signal pathway, instead occurring through the activation and crosstalk of multiple intricate pathways.
Detailing the (pre-)clinical delivery methods used to deliver viral proteins to cancer.
| Method | Apoptin | E4orf4 | E1A | NS1 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Adenovirus | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lentivirus | Yes | / | / | / | |
| Baculovirus | Yes | / | / | / | |
|
| Direct injection | Yes | / | / | / |
| Electroporation | Yes | Yes | / | / | |
| Polymer coupled | Yes | / | / | / | |
| Liposomal | / | / | Yes | / | |
|
| CPP/PTD’s | Yes | Yes | Yes | / |