| Literature DB >> 32183420 |
Abstract
The knowledge about the molecular alterations which are found in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) has much increased in recent years. However, we are still awaiting the translation of this knowledge to new diagnostic and therapeutic options. Among the many molecular changes that are detected in head and neck cancer, the abnormalities in several signaling pathways, which regulate cell proliferation, cell death and stemness, seem to be especially promising with regard to the development of targeted therapies. Canonical Wnt signaling is a pathway engaged in the formation of head and neck tissues, however it is not active in adult somatic mucosal cells. The aim of this review paper is to bring together significant data related to the current knowledge on the mechanisms and functional significance of the dysregulation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway in head and neck tumors. Research evidence related to the role of Wnt signaling activation in the stimulation of cell proliferation, migration and inhibition of apoptosis in HNSCC is presented. Moreover, its role in promoting stemness traits in head and neck cancer stem-like cells is described. Evidence corroborating the hypothesis that the Wnt signaling pathway is a very promising target of novel therapeutic interventions in HNSCC is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Wnt signaling; head and neck cancer; β-catenin
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32183420 PMCID: PMC7140616 DOI: 10.3390/cells9030723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1The fates of β-catenin, when the canonical Wnt pathway is not activated. Extracellular Wnt ligands are sequestered by antagonistic proteins (SFRPs, WIF1) and cannot bind to FZD/LRP receptors. Membrane-bound β-catenin takes part in cell-cell adhesion, together with E-cadherin and α-catenin. Cytoplasmic β-catenin is phosphorylated by the components of the destruction complex (CK, GSK-3β) and targeted for ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation, and thus cannot translocate to nucleus and activate transcription. TCF/LEF transcription factors form complexes with suppressors of β-catenin-dependent transcription (e.g., Groucho) and cannot stimulate the expression of WRE-regulated genes. WRE—Wnt response element, CK—casein kinase 1.
Figure 2The activation of the canonical Wnt pathway in head and neck cancers is mediated by various factors. The synthesis of Wnt ligands is enhanced, which is related to the elevated activity of enzymes responsible for post-translational modifications—glycosylation and palmitoylation. The increased activity of Wnt ligands results from the reduced expression of extracellular Wnt antagonists. After secretion, Wnt ligands activate FZD/LRP receptors, which destabilizes the destruction complex, which can no longer phosphorylate β-catenin and stimulate its degradation. The destabilization of the destruction complex may also be mediated by the activation/overexpression of other molecular factors (e.g., EGFR, PI3K, c-MET, CIP2A), including HPV infection (details provided in the text). The resulting translocation of β-catenin to the nucleus activates TCF/LEF-mediated transcription of WRE-regulated genes, which relies on the cooperation with histone modifying proteins (MLL, CBP).
Key molecular alterations related to canonical Wnt pathway activation in HNSCC.
| Gene/Protein | Type of Alteration | Molecular Effects | Functional Significance | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drivers of Wnt activation | ||||
| overexpression | translocation of β-catenin | lymph node invasion | [ | |
|
| mutational loss | stabilization of β-catenin | enhanced cell growth | [ |
|
| mutational loss | reduced sequestration of β-catenin | enhanced cell growth, loss of cell adhesion | [ |
|
| (epi)mutational loss | release of β-catenin from cell-cell junctions | enhanced cell growth, loss of cell adhesion | [ |
|
| overexpression | stabilization and nuclear translocation of β-catenin | enhanced cell proliferation | [ |
|
| overexpression | Wnt activation via FZD8 | increased stemness | [ |
|
| epigenetic silencing | reduced Wnt ligand sequestration | worse prognosis | [ |
|
| epigenetic silencing | reduced Wnt ligand sequestration | worse prognosis | [ |
| HPV | overexpression | stabilization of β-catenin | neoplastic transformation | [ |
| β-catenin | nuclear accumulation | enhanced expression of Wnt target genes ( | invasiveness, lymph node metastasis, recurrence, dedifferentiation | [ |
|
| overexpression | transcriptional activation | lymph node invasion | [ |
| Targets for therapeutic inhibition of Wnt signaling | ||||
| WNT-1 | knockdown | reduced Vimentin expression | inhibition of epithelial-to- mesenchymal transition | [ |
| inhibition by antibody | reduced expression of Wnt target genes | reduced HNSCC cell viability | [ | |
| FZD-DVL complex | niclosamide | altered gene expression | reduced stemness | [ |
| β-catenin | knockdown | decreased gene expression of | reduced stemness | [ |
| decreased cell invasion | [ | |||
| cell cycle arrest, reduced cell migration, induction of apoptosis | [ | |||
| decreased cisplatin resistance | [ | |||
| increased radiosensitivity | [ | |||
| Porcupine | IWP-2 inhibitor | inhibition of | reduced cell proliferation and migration | [ |
| LGK974 inhibitor | reduced Wnt target gene expression | reduced tumor growth | [ | |
| C59 inhibitor | reduced secretion of WNT-3A, reduced | impaired HPV-driven transformation | [ | |
| CBP | ICG-001 inhibitor | altered gene expression | cell cycle arrest, induction of apoptosis, reduced stemness, tumor growth and metastasis | [ |
| PI3K pathway | emodin | inhibition of PI3K/Akt/ β-catenin pathway | reduced cell invasiveness | [ |
| pyrithione zinc | reduced expression of | reduced cell proliferation and invasion, apoptosis | [ | |
| CUL4B | knockdown | reduced expression of | reduced cell growth, migration and invasion | [ |