| Literature DB >> 32210140 |
Kishor Pant1, Estanislao Peixoto1, Seth Richard1, Sergio A Gradilone1,2.
Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a highly invasive and metastatic form of carcinoma with bleak prognosis due to limited therapies, frequent relapse, and chemotherapy resistance. There is an urgent need to identify the molecular regulators of CCA in order to develop novel therapeutics and advance diseases diagnosis. Many cellular proteins including histones may undergo a series of enzyme-mediated post-translational modifications including acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, sumoylation, and crotonylation. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) play an important role in regulating epigenetic maintenance and modifications of their targets, which in turn exert critical impacts on chromatin structure, gene expression, and stability of proteins. As such, HDACs constitute a group of potential therapeutic targets for CCA. The aim of this review was to summarize the role that HDACs perform in regulating epigenetic changes, tumor development, and their potential as therapeutic targets for CCA.Entities:
Keywords: HDACi; HDACs; cholangiocarcinoma; hepatobiliary cancers
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32210140 PMCID: PMC7140894 DOI: 10.3390/cells9030780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Different classes of HDACs, their co-factors, and their cellular locations.
| Co-Factor | Class | Members | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zn+2-dependent | HDAC I | HDAC1 | Nucleus |
| HDAC2 | Nucleus | ||
| HDAC3 | Nucleus | ||
| HDAC8 | Nucleus | ||
| HDAC II | HDAC4 | Nucleus/cytoplasm | |
| HDAC5 | Nucleus/cytoplasm | ||
| HDAC7 | Nucleus/cytoplasm | ||
| HDAC9 | Nucleus/cytoplasm | ||
| HDAC6 | Cytoplasm | ||
| HDAC10 | Cytoplasm | ||
| HDAC IV | HDAC11 | Nucleus | |
| NAD+-dependent | HDAC III | SIRT1 | Nucleus/cytoplasm |
| SIRT2 | Nucleus | ||
| SIRT3 | Mitochondria | ||
| SIRT4 | Mitochondria | ||
| SIRT5 | Mitochondria | ||
| SIRT6 | Nucleus | ||
| SIRT7 | Nucleus |
Figure 1Acetylation and deacetylation of nucleosomal histones and other cellular proteins that play an important role in the modulation of chromatin arrangement and gene expression, as well as in the regulation of protein stability and cellular function. Histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs) are two contrasting classes of enzymes that closely regulate histone acetylation and deacetylation.
Targets of different HDAC inhibitors (HDACis). SAHA—suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, TSA—trichostatin A, SCFA—short chain fatty acids.
| HDAC Inhibitors | Activity | Target HDACs |
|---|---|---|
|
| Hydroxamates | I, II, IV |
|
| Hydroxamates | I, II, IV |
|
| Hydroxamates | I |
|
| Depsipeptides | I |
|
| Depsipeptides | I |
|
| SCFA | I, II |
|
| SCFA | I, IIa |
|
| SCFA | I, IIa |
|
| Benzamides | I |
|
| Benzamides | I |
|
| Benzamides | I, IV |
|
| Other | I, II, IV |
|
| Other | I |
|
| Other | I, II, IV |
|
| Other | I, II, IV |
|
| Other | I, II, IV |
|
| Other | II |
Figure 2HDACs help in the progression of cancer cell growth and spreading via regulating cell proliferation, angiogenesis, apoptosis, metastasis, autophagy, and senescence.
Figure 3The role of metabolites affecting HDAC activity. In normal conditions, HDACs leads to the removal of the acetyl group from lysine from the target proteins. This reaction is modulated by the described metabolites or physical factors via the activation or inhibition function of HDAC activities.
Figure 4Working model for the role of HDACs in ciliary disassembly. Ciliary disassembly is mediated through deacetylation of α-tubulin in the ciliary axoneme mediated by HDACs. Removal of acetyl groups from α-tubulin destabilizes axoneme microtubules, promoting ciliary resorption.