| Literature DB >> 31861708 |
Ilias P Nikas1, Sophie C Themistocleous1, Stavroula A Paschou1,2, Konstantinos I Tsamis1,3, Han Suk Ryu4.
Abstract
Cancer, a heterogeneous disease composed of tumor cells and microenvironment, is driven by deregulated processes such as increased proliferation, invasion, metastasis, angiogenesis, and evasion of apoptosis. Alternative splicing, a mechanism led by splicing factors, is implicated in carcinogenesis by affecting any of the processes above. Accumulating evidence suggests that serine-arginine protein kinase 1 (SRPK1), an enzyme that phosphorylates splicing factors rich in serine/arginine domains, has a prognostic and potential predictive role in various cancers. Its upregulation is correlated with higher tumor staging, grading, and shorter survival. SRPK1 is also highly expressed in the premalignant changes of some cancers, showing a potential role in the early steps of carcinogenesis. Of interest, its downregulation in preclinical models has mostly been tumor-suppressive and affected diverse processes heterogeneously, depending on the oncogenic context. In addition, targeting SRPK1 has enhanced sensitivity to platinum-based chemotherapy in some cancers. Lastly, its aberrant function has been noted not only in cancer cells but also in the endothelial cells of the microenvironment. Although the aforementioned evidence seems promising, more studies are needed to reinforce the use of SRPK1 inhibitors in clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: TNM staging; alternative splicing; angiogenesis; apoptosis; cancer survival; chemotherapy resistance; metastasis; personalized medicine; prognosis; serine-arginine protein kinase 1 (SRPK1)
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Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31861708 PMCID: PMC7017105 DOI: 10.3390/cells9010019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Gene expression studies on human material that highlight the prognostic role of SRPK1 in various cancers. Cancers are listed according to their global estimated number of new cases (highest to lowest; GLOBOCAN 2018 estimates) [28].
| Cancer type (Primary Location) | Approach Followed (Testing on Histology Samples/Blood; Data Mining) | Level Tested (mRNA; Protein) | Clinical Significance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lung | data mining; histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in NSCLC and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in NSCLC | [ | |
| data mining | mRNA | ↑SRPK1 was found in lung adenocarcinoma (a NSCLC histologic type) | [ | |
| Breast | histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in breast cancer and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ |
| histology samples; data mining | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was associated with shorter survival in breast cancer and metastatic disease to the lungs and brain | [ | |
| data mining | mRNA | ↑SRPK1 was associated with shorter survival in HER2-negative breast cancer patients treated with chemotherapy | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in breast cancer | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in breast cancer | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in breast cancer and was associated with higher tumor grade | [ | |
| Prostate | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in prostate cancer and its precursor (PIN) | [ |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in prostate cancer and was associated with higher stage | [ | |
| Colorectal | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in colon cancer and its precursor (adenoma) | [ |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in colon cancer and was associated with higher tumor grade | [ | |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ | |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ | |
| histology samples | mRNA | ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer and its precursor (adenoma) | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 and p-AKT were found in colon cancer | [ | |
| Stomach | data mining | mRNA | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer | [ |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer | [ | |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer and was associated with higher tumor stage and shorter survival | [ | |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer and was associated with higher tumor grade, stage, and shorter survival | [ | |
| Liver | histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was associated with higher stage and shorter survival; SRPK1 expression was inversely correlated with miR-1296 expression | [ |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in liver cancer and was associated with higher stage and shorter survival | [ | |
| histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in liver cancer | [ | |
| Esophagus | histology samples | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in esophageal cancer and was associated with higher grade, stage, and shorter survival | [ |
| Pancreas | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in pancreatic cancer and its precursor (dysplasia) | [ |
| Leukemia | blood | mRNA; protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in acute ATL | [ |
| Kidney | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in renal cell carcinoma | [ |
| Glioma | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in gliomas and was associated with lower rather than higher tumor grade | [ |
| histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in glioblastomas (Grade IV gliomas) and was associated with shorter survival | [ | |
| Ovary | histology samples | protein | ↑SRPK1 was found in ovarian cancer | [ |
| histology samples | mRNA | ↑SRPK1 was found in ovarian cancer | [ | |
| Testis | histology samples | protein | ↓SRPK1 was associated with resistance to chemotherapy in NSGCTs | [ |
| Eye | histology samples | protein | ↓SRPK1 was found in advanced retinoblastomas, especially the ones that recurred or metastasized | [ |
SRPK1, serine-arginine protein kinase 1; NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; PIN, pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia; miR-1296, microRNA 1296; ATL, adult T-cell leukemia; p-AKT, phosphorylated-protein kinase B; NSGCTs, non-seminomatous germ cell tumors.
Published preclinical studies (cell lines/in vitro; animal models/in vivo) that summarize the effect of aberrant SRPK1 expression on distinct oncogenic processes (e.g., proliferation, angiogenesis, apoptosis) via a plethora of mechanisms/pathways, highlighting the potential role of SRPK1 as a therapeutic target in various malignancies. Cancers are listed according to their global estimated number of new cases (highest to lowest; GLOBOCAN 2018 estimates) [28].
| Cancer Type (Primary Location) | SRPK1 Upregulation (mRNA and/or Protein Levels) | SRPK1 Downregulation (e.g., Gene Silencing; Pharmacologic Inhibition) | SRPK1-Mediated Mechanism(s)/ Pathway(s) Involved | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lung | ↑SRPK1 promoted cell growth, invasion, CSCs aggregation, and the expression of various stem cell markers in vitro; it also promoted tumor growth and tumorigenicity in vivo | ↓SRPK1 suppressed cell growth and CSCs in vitro; it also suppressed tumor growth and tumorigenicity in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the Wnt/β-catenin pathway | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 promoted NSCLC cell growth and migration in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed cell growth and migration in vitro, also tumorigenicity in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the β-catenin/TCF pathway | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in NSCLC endothelial cell lines and promoted cell growth, migration, and invasion in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed cell growth, migration and invasion and induced apoptosis in vitro; it also suppressed tumor growth and metastasis and prolonged survival in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the β-catenin/TCF pathway and the GSK3-β | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 and proangiogenic VEGF were found in tumor endothelial cells in vivo | ↓SRPK1 induced the expression of antiangiogenic VEGF in tumor endothelial cells and suppressed angiogenesis in vivo | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis interacts with WT-1 and regulates VEGF alternative splicing (proangiogenic vs. antiangiogenic isoforms) | [ | |
| Breast | ↑SRPK1 was found in BLBC cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed the migration of BLBC cells in vitro and breast cancer metastasis to the lungs in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the NF-κB pathway | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in hormone-positive and triple-negative breast cancer cell lines and promoted the localization of RBM4 in the cytoplasm; this enhanced the expression of the antiapoptotic IR-A and MCL-1L isoforms in hormone-positive breast cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 in hormone-positive breast cancer cells promoted apoptosis by reducing the phosphorylation of RBM4 and restoring its localization in the nucleus; this enhanced the expression of the proapoptotic IR-B and MCL-1s isoforms | SRPK1 regulates the alternative splicing of IR and MCL-1 by modulating the localization of RBM4 inside the cell (cytoplasm vs. nucleus) | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in hormone-positive and triple-negative breast cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 induced apoptosis and sensitivity to chemotherapy in hormone-positive breast cancer cells | SRPK1 interacts with the AKT and MAPK pathways and modulates MAP2K2 alternative splicing | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in breast cancer cell lines | [ | |||
| Prostate | ↑SRPK1 was found in prostate cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed angiogenesis (as shown by the reduced MVD) and thus tumor growth in vivo by inducing the expression of the antiangiogenic VEGF-165b | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis regulates VEGF-A alternative splicing (proangiogenic vs. antiangiogenic VEGF isoforms) | [ |
| Colorectal | ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 induced apoptosis and sensitivity to chemotherapy in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the AKT and MAPK pathways and modulates MAP2K2 alternative splicing | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer cell lines and induced proliferation in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed growth, angiogenesis, migration and induced apoptosis in vitro | [ | ||
| ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the miR-216b | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed the SRSF-1 dependent expression of Rac1b isoform | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis regulates Rac1 alternative splicing | [ | ||
| ↑SRPK1 was found in colorectal cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 increased the 4A/4B exon ratio of SLC39A14 in vitro | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis interacts with the Wnt pathway and regulates SLC39A14 alternative splicing | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in the chemoresistant colorectal cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 was found in the chemosensitive colorectal cancer cell lines | SRPK1 regulates the response to chemotherapy in colorectal cancer cell lines | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 induced expression of the antiangiogenic VEGF-165b and suppressed angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo | SRPK1 regulates VEGF alternative splicing | [ | ||
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the long noncoding RNA MALAT1 | [ | ||
| Skin (non-melanoma) | ↑SRPK1 abolished the suppression of migration, invasion, and EMT caused by SOX2 knockdown in BCC cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed migration, invasion, and EMT in vitro | The SRPK1-mediated PI3K/AKT pathway interacts with SOX2 | [ |
| Stomach | ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer cell lines and promoted proliferation and invasion in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation and invasion in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the AKT and ERK pathways | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 promoted proliferation in vitro and in vivo | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation both in vitro and in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the small nucleolar RNA-mediated pathways | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer cell lines and promoted proliferation, migration, and invasion in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and invasion in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with miR-126 | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in gastric cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 abolished the IGF-1-mediated expression of EMT markers, induced cell cycle arrest and suppressed migration and invasion in vitro | The IGF-1/SRPK1 pathway regulates EMT | [ | |
| Liver | ↑SRPK1 promoted migration, invasion, and EMT in vitro; SRPK1 expression was inversely correlated with miR-1296 in vivo and in vitro | ↓SRPK1 suppressed migration and invasion in vitro | The SRPK1-induced PI3K/AKT pathway interacts with miR-1296 | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in hepatocellular cancer cell lines | [ | |||
| ↑SRPK1 was found in hepatocellular cancer cell lines and promoted proliferation | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation in vitro and growth in vivo and in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the PI3K/AKT pathway | [ | |
| Esophagus | ↑SRPK1 was found in esophageal cancer cell lines and promoted proliferation | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and invasion and enhanced apoptosis in vitro also suppressed tumor growth in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the TGF-β pathways | [ |
| Pancreas | ↑SRPK1 was found in pancreatic cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation and enhanced apoptosis and sensitivity to chemotherapy in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with SR proteins and regulates apoptosis | [ |
| SRPK1 interacts with the AKT and MAPK pathways | [ | |||
| Blood (Leukemia) | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation in vitro and tumor growth in vivo, while it enhanced cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and prolonged the survival of animal models in MLL-rearranged AML; ↓SRPK1 switched BRD4 splicing, favoring the production of its long isoform | SRPK1 modulates the alternative splicing of BRD4, MYB, and MED24 | [ | |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in various myeloid and lymphoid leukemia cell lines | ↓SRPK1 was cytotoxic and enhanced apoptosis in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the SR proteins and modulates the expression and splicing of MAP2Ks, VEGF, and FAS | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation while it enhanced autophagy and apoptosis in a synergistic fashion with chemotherapy in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with SR proteins and modulates the expression of MAP2Ks and VEGF and the splicing of RON | [ | ||
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation and enhanced apoptosis in vitro in CML | SRPK1 interacts with the PARP-caspase-3 pathway | [ | ||
| Kidney | ↑SRPK1 was found in renal cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and invasion in vitro, also tumor growth in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with PI3K/AKT pathway | [ |
| Brain (Glioma) | ↑SRPK1 was found in glioma cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and invasion of glioma cells in vitro while it induced resistance to chemotherapy | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed tumor growth and apoptosis in vivo, also angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo | The plexin-B1/SRPK1 pathway regulates cell motility, apoptosis, and angiogenesis | [ | ||
| ↑SRPK1 was found in glioma cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed cell viability and response to chemotherapy in vitro | [ | ||
| ↑SRPK1 was found in glioma cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed apoptosis in vivo and in vitro, also migration and invasion in vivo | SRPK1 interacts with the PI3K/Akt pathway and modulates the expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9 | [ | |
| Ovary | ↑SRPK1 was found in ovarian cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and cell cycle progression also enhanced sensitivity to chemotherapy in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the AKT and MAPK pathways | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 was found in ovarian cancer cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and invasion while it enhanced apoptosis and sensitivity to chemotherapy in vitro | SRPK1 interacts with the long noncoding RNA UCA1 | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 enhanced resistance to chemotherapy in vitro | [ | |||
| Skin (Melanoma) | ↑SRPK1 was found in melanoma cell lines | ↓SRPK1 suppressed angiogenesis (as shown by the reduced MVD) and thus tumor growth in vivo by suppressing the expression of proangiogenic VEGF | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis regulates VEGF alternative splicing | [ |
| ↑SRPK1 and proangiogenic VEGF were found in tumor endothelial cells in vivo | ↓SRPK1 suppressed angiogenesis in vivo by enhancing antiangiogenic VEGF expression in tumor endothelial cells | The SRPK1/SRSF1 axis interacts with WT-1 and regulates VEGF splicing | [ | |
| ↓SRPK1 suppressed migration, invasion, adhesion, and colony formation in vitro, also metastasis in vivo | [ |
SRPK1, serine-arginine protein kinase 1; NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma; CSCs, cancer stem cells; TCF, T-cell factor; GSK3-β, glycogen synthase kinase 3-β; VEGF-A, vascular endothelial growth factor-A; BLBC, basal-like breast cancer; SRSF1, Serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 1; WT-1, Wilms tumor-1; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; IR, insulin receptor; MCL-1, myeloid cell leukemia-1; RBM4, RNA-binding motif protein 4; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; MAP2K2, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 2; MVD, microvascular density; miR-216b, microRNA-216b; Rac1, Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1; SLC39A14, zinc transporter ZIP14; MALAT1, metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1; EMT, epithelial mesenchymal transition; BCC, basal cell carcinoma; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; ERK, extracellular signal regulated kinase; miR-126, microRNA-126, IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor-1; TGF-β, transforming growth factor-β; SR proteins, serine arginine-rich proteins; BRD4, bromodomain-containing protein 4; MED24, mediator complex subunit 24; MLL, mixed-lineage leukemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; RON, Recepteur d’Origine Nantais; PARP, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase; CML, chronic myeloid leukemia; MMP, metalloproteinase; UCA1, urothelial carcinoma-associated 1.
Figure 1This figure shows the effect of serine-arginine protein kinase 1 downregulation (↓SRPK1) on distinct oncogenic processes, highlighting its potential role as a therapeutic target in various malignancies. Fourteen different cancer types are shown. Arrows and inhibition symbols represent promotion or suppression, respectively, of the pointed processes after SRPK1 downregulation in each one of the listed cancer types. Red color means the specific interaction between SRPK1 and the pointed process is discussed in the literature. Gray color could mean that the interaction is not described, described but not activated (e.g., ↓SRPK1 doesn’t involve proliferation, migration, and invasion in prostate cancer or proliferation in melanoma) or described with an opposite result in the literature (e.g., ↓SRPK1 enhances resistance, rather than sensitivity to chemotherapy in gliomas).
Figure 2SRPK1 (serine-arginine protein kinase 1) overexpression deregulates alternative splicing and promotes cancer through distinct oncogenic processes such as angiogenesis and apoptosis. (a) SRPK1 overexpression switches VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) alternative splicing towards the proangiogenic VEGF isoform(s) in prostate cancer, colorectal cancer, melanoma, and tumor endothelium. (b) SRPK1 overexpression switches IR (insulin receptor) and MCL-1 (myeloid cell leukemia-1) alternative splicing towards the antiapoptotic isoforms IR-A and MCL-1L, respectively, in hormone-positive breast cancer.