| Literature DB >> 32426354 |
Yetunde Makinwa1, Phillip R Musich2, Yue Zou1,2.
Abstract
Peptidyl-prolyl isomerization is an important post-translational modification of protein because proline is the only amino acid that can stably exist as cis and trans, while other amino acids are in the trans conformation in protein backbones. This makes prolyl isomerization a unique mechanism for cells to control many cellular processes. Isomerization is a rate-limiting process that requires a peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) to overcome the energy barrier between cis and trans isomeric forms. Pin1, a key PPIase in the cell, recognizes a phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro motif to catalyze peptidyl-prolyl isomerization in proteins. The significance of the phosphorylation-dependent Pin1 activity was recently highlighted for isomerization of ATR (ataxia telangiectasia- and Rad3-related). ATR, a PIKK protein kinase, plays a crucial role in DNA damage responses (DDR) by phosphorylating hundreds of proteins. ATR can form cis or trans isomers in the cytoplasm depending on Pin1 which isomerizes cis-ATR to trans-ATR. Trans-ATR functions primarily in the nucleus. The cis-ATR, containing an exposed BH3 domain, is anti-apoptotic at mitochondria by binding to tBid, preventing activation of pro-apoptotic Bax. Given the roles of apoptosis in many human diseases, particularly cancer, we propose that cytoplasmic cis-ATR enables cells to evade apoptosis, thus addicting cancer cells to cis-ATR formation for survival. But in normal DDR, a predominance of trans-ATR in the nucleus coordinates with a minimal level of cytoplasmic cis-ATR to promote DNA repair while preventing cell death; however, cells can die when DNA repair fails. Therefore, a delicate balance/equilibrium of the levels of cis- and trans-ATR is required to ensure the cellular homeostasis. In this review, we make a case that this anti-apoptotic role of cis-ATR supports oncogenesis, while Pin1 that drives the formation of trans-ATR suppresses tumor growth. We offer a potential, novel target that can be specifically targeted in cancer cells, without killing normal cells, to significantly reduce the adverse effects usually seen in cancer treatment. We also raise important issues regarding the roles of phosphorylation-dependent Pin1 isomerization of ATR in diseases and propose areas of future studies that would shed more understanding on this important cellular mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: Pin1; antiapoptotic ATR; apoptosis; cancer; cis and trans; cytoplasmic ATR; prolyl isomerization
Year: 2020 PMID: 32426354 PMCID: PMC7203486 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Non-enzymatic proline isomerization within proteins is a slow, rate-limiting process in the folding pathway.
FIGURE 2Pin1 participates extensively in multiple cellular processes involved in cancer. Pin1 has many cellular substrates that participate in the multi-step tumor development processes. Pin1’s roles can be contradictory: pro- or anti-tumor. Pin1 inhibits formation of cis-ATR and deprives the cell of cis-ATR’s anti-apoptotic role at the mitochondria, while promoting the formation of trans-ATR in the nucleus where it is important for repair of genotoxic stress to prevent mutations and maintain genome stability. Modified from Chen et al. (2018).
FIGURE 3Graphical representation of the proposed mechanism by which ATR plays a direct anti-apoptotic function at the mitochondria. UV damage inactivates Pin1’s isomerization of ATR in the cytoplasm. Cis-ATR (ATR-H) then accumulates and binds to and sequesters t-Bid at the outer mitochondria membrane. Without tBid, Bax and Bak fail to polymerize, thus cis-ATR inhibits cytochrome c release and apoptosis. Trans-ATR (ATR-L) is the dominant isomer in the nucleus where it interacts with ATRIP, RPA and chromatin in the DNA damage repair (DDR) response. PPs (protein phosphatases) can dephosphorylate the Pin1 recognition motif and promote formation of cis-ATR (to be published elsewhere). Modified from Hilton et al. (2015).
FIGURE 4A brief summary of the mechanism by which the levels of cytoplasmic cis- and trans-ATR isoforms are mediated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation before and after UV irradiation. The red X stands for inhibition or inactivation of Pin1.
Pin1 RNA expression in caner patients analyzed by Kaplan-Meier Plot (Human Protein Atlas).
| Cancer type | Male/female (n/n) | Max post- diagnosis years | Pin1 expression | ||||||
| Survival probability | 5-year survival (%) | ||||||||
| Expression | Prognosis | ||||||||
| Low | High | Level | status | ||||||
| Lower | Higher | expression | expression | cut-off | (Prognosability) | ||||
| Renal | 591/286 | 16 | Low | High | 64% | 82% | 9.65 | 0.000078 | Yes |
| Pancreatic | 96/80 | 7 | Low | High | 7% | 48% | 8.72 | 0.00032 | Yes |
| Glioma | 99/54 | 7 | Low | High | 5% (∗) | 12% (∗) | 15.74 | 0.022 | No |
| Thyroid | 135/366 | 15 | Low | High | 91% | 100% | 9.19 | 0.031 | No |
| Lung | 596/398 | 20 | Low | High | 40% | 47% | 6.16 | 0.029 | No |
| Stomach | 229/125 | 10 | Low | High | 26% | 50% | 8.03 | 0.022 | No |
| Breast | 12/1063 | 23 | Low | High | 81% | 82% | 7.16 | 0.25 | No |
| Cervical | 0/291 | 17 | Low | High | 59% | 74% | 10.81 | 0.0061 | No |
| Endometrial | 0/541 | 19 | Low | High | 70% | 80% | 8.61 | 0.044 | No |
| Ovarian | 0/373 | 15 | Low | High | 27% | 38% | 13.22 | 0.0072 | No |
| Urothelial | 299/107 | 14 | Low | High | 33% | 43% | 7.49 | 0.012 | No |
| Head and Neck | 366/133 | 17 | Low | High | 39% | 57% | 8.75 | 0.0065 | No |
| Melanoma | 60/42 | 5 | High | Low | 37% (∗) | 0 (∗) | 15.17 | 0.27 | No |
| Prostate | 494/0 | 14 | High | Low | 100% | 97% | 11.77 | 0.094 | No |
| Testis | 134/0 | 20 | High | Low | 100% | 97% | 8.63 | 0.26 | No |
| Liver | 246/119 | 10 | Non-determined | 53% | 46% | 5.4 | 0.190 | No | |
| Colorectal | 322/275 | 12 | Non-determined | 63% | 60% | 8.76 | 0.065 | No | |
| Total Cases | 3679/4253 | Low:High=3:12 | (∗): 3-year Survival | ||||||
FIGURE 5An appropriate balance between cytoplasmic levels of cis- and trans- ATR is critical for the wellbeing of cells.