| Literature DB >> 31991790 |
Yu-Bo Shi1,2, Jun Li1,3, Xing-Ning Lai1,3, Rui Jiang2, Rui-Chen Zhao1,2, Li-Xia Xiong1,4.
Abstract
Lung cancer is one of the most common and malignant cancers with extremely high morbidity and mortality in both males and females. Although traditional lung cancer treatments are fast progressing, there are still limitations. Caveolin-1 (Cav-1), a main component of caveolae, participates in multiple cellular events such as immune responses, endocytosis, membrane trafficking, cellular signaling and cancer progression. It has been found tightly associated with lung cancer cell proliferation, migration, apoptosis resistance and drug resistance. In addition to this, multiple bioactive molecules have been confirmed to target Cav-1 to carry on their anti-tumor functions in lung cancers. Cav-1 can also be a predictor for lung cancer patients' prognosis. In this review, we have summarized the valuable research on Cav-1 and lung cancer in recent years and discussed the multifaceted roles of Cav-1 on lung cancer occurrence, development and therapy, hoping to provide new insights into lung cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Caveolin-1 (Cav-1); lung cancer; metastasis; targeted therapy; tumor progression
Year: 2020 PMID: 31991790 PMCID: PMC7073165 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12020291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Structure of caveolae and Cav-1. Caveolae is an Ω-shaped structure located on cell membranes. Cav-1 is a main component of caveolae, consisting of a C-MAD, transmembrane, and scaffolding domains.
The diversity of Cav-1 expression in non-cancer tissues and lung cancer tissues of different grades and types.
| Tissue Type | Histological Type | Tumor Grade | Cav-1 positive Number/Total Sample Number | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-cancer tissue | ----- | ----- | 16/16(100%) | [ |
| 15/19(78.9%) | [ | |||
| 20/20(100%) | [ | |||
| 20/20(100%) | [ | |||
| Lung cancer tissue | AC | IV | 23/116(19.8%) | [ |
| AC | I–III | 19/43(44.19%) | [ | |
| SCC | I–III | 34/107(31.7%) | [ | |
| AC+SCC+others (LCLC, ASC and carcinoid) | I–IV | 60/115(52.2%) | [ | |
| AC+SCC+LCLC | I–IV | 105/160(65.7%) | [ | |
| AC+SCC+LCLC | III and/or IV | 12/73(16.4%) | [ | |
| AC+SCC+LCLC+ASC | I–III | 69/140(49.3%) | [ | |
| SCLC | I–IV | 49/70(70%) | [ |
ASC: adenosquamous carcinoma.
Figure 2The pattern of lung cancer metastasis. (a). The preferential sites of lung cancer metastasis, include brain, liver, bones and adrenal glands; (b). Cav-1 participates in lung cancer metastasis. The lung tumor epithelial cells can undergo epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) to become more invasive transformed cells, then invade locally into the stroma by extending motive pseudopods and secreting MMPs to degrade ECM, later intravasate into blood or lymphatic vessels and survive within the circulation, and finally extravasate and generate a metastatic lesion at a distant site. Cav-1 can inhibit TGF-β signaling-mediated EMT via inducing the internalization and degradation of TβR-1. Cav-1 over-expression can increase the Snail level to repress the E-cadherin level, further to facilitate EMT, and can also increase the lamellipodia and filopodia formation by elevating pAKT and pFAK expression, leading to enhanced cell invasiveness. Cav-1 absence can prevent VEGFR-2 from binding VE-cadherin and permits VEGFR-2 to be phosphorylated by VEGF, thus to enhance endothelial cell growth and lead to angiogenesis. Cav-1 knockdown can reduce E-cadherin to attenuate cell adhesion and lead to EMT.
Various Cav-1-targeted approaches to suppressing NSCLC progression.
| Agent | Cell Line | Mode of Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| H2O2 and O2·− | H460 | H2O2 and O2·−→ Cav-1↓→ pAKT↓→ migration↓ | [ |
| Chrysotobibenzyl | H460 H292 | Chrysotobibenzyl→ Cav-1↓→ integrin β1, β3, αv↓ | [ |
| Gigantol | H460 | Gigantol→ Cav-1↓→ pAKT↓→ CDC42↓→ EMT↓ and migration↓ | [ |
| DF-A | H460 | DF-A→ Cav-1↓, Mcl-1↓and Bcl-2↓→ anoikis↑ | [ |
| Moscatilin | H460 | Moscatilin→ Cav-1↓→ Mcl-1↓→ pAKT↓,pERK↓→ | [ |
| Zinc | H460 | Zinc→ Cav-1↓→ pAKT↓→ anoikis↑ | [ |
| Cordycepin | A549 | Cordycepin→ Cav-1↑→ p-JNK↑→ Foxo3a↑→ | [ |
| Jorunnamycin A | H460 H292 | Jorunnamycin A→ Cav-1↓→ pAKT↓,pERK↓→ | [ |
| EEAC | A549 | EEAC→ Cav-1↓→ chemosensitivity to paclitaxel↑ | [ |
| Albumin-encapsuled fenretinide | A549 | Cav-1 promotes albumin-encapsuled fenretinide uptake into cell→ apoptosis↑ | [ |
| Bleomycin | A549 | Bleomycin→ Cav-1↑→ p53↑, p21↑→ senescence↑ | [ |
Figure 3The dual roles of Cav-1 on regulating lung cancer development, including cell proliferation, metastasis, apoptosis, drug resistance and predicting patients’ survival. The dotted arrow indicates the mechanism that hasn't been elucidated clearly.