| Literature DB >> 32626654 |
Eduardo Silva-Pavez1, Julio C Tapia1.
Abstract
Protein kinase CK2 (formerly known as casein kinase 2) is abnormally elevated in many cancers. This may increase tumor aggressiveness through CK2-dependent phosphorylation of key proteins in several signaling pathways. In this work, we have compiled evidence from the literature to suggest that CK2 also modulates a metabolic switch characteristic of cancer cells that enhances resistance to death, due to either drugs or to a microenvironment deficient in oxygen or nutrients. Concurrently, CK2 may help to preserve mitochondrial activity in a PTEN-dependent manner. PTEN, widely recognized as a tumor suppressor, is another CK2 substrate in the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway that promotes cancer viability and aerobic glycolysis. Given that CK2 can regulate Akt as well as two of its main effectors, namely mTORC1 and β-catenin, we comprehensively describe how CK2 may modulate cancer energetics by regulating expression of key targets and downstream processes, such as HIF-1 and autophagy, respectively. Thus, the specific inhibition of CK2 may lead to a catastrophic death of cancer cells, which could become a feasible therapeutic strategy to beat this devastating disease. In fact, ATP-competitive inhibitors, synthetic peptides and antisense oligonucleotides have been designed as CK2 inhibitors, some of them used in preclinical models of cancer, of which TBB and silmitasertib are widely known. We will finish by discussing a hypothetical scenario in which cancer cells are "addicted" to CK2; i.e., in which many proteins that regulate signaling pathways and metabolism-linked processes are highly dependent on this kinase.Entities:
Keywords: aerobic glycolysis; autophagy; casein kinase CK2; hypoxia; metabolic switch; mitochondrial function; warburg effect
Year: 2020 PMID: 32626654 PMCID: PMC7315807 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.00893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Effect of CK2 activity alterations on both mitochondrial- and energetics-related components in several cancers.
| Overexpression | Increment of LDHA expression and activity, down-regulation of PKM1 isoform and nuclear import of PKM2 isoform. | Colorectal, esophagus, bladder | ( |
| Overexpression | Increased glucose consumption and extracellular lactate levels, which is blocked by inhibition of LDHA. | Colorectal | ( |
| siRNA silencing | Inhibition of the Warburg effect. | Bladder | ( |
| Inhibition (TBB) | Mitochondrial membrane depolarization. | Prostate | ( |
| NE | β-catenin-dependent increased expression of MCT-1 and PDK1. | Colorectal | ( |
| Overexpression | β-catenin-dependent increased expression of survivin. | Colorectal | ( |
| NE | Survivin increases the Warburg effect through mitochondrial complex II stability. | Colorectal | ( |
| NE | β-catenin-dependent increased expression of c-Myc, ASCT2, and glutaminase. | Colorectal, breast | ( |
| NE | p27, p62, and probably ULK-1, are substrates of CK2. | Colorectal | ( |
| Inhibition (TBB, quinalizarin) | ATF4-regulated expression of proteins at autophagy, amino acid biosynthesis and transport, lipid and glucose metabolisms. | Colorectal | ( |
| Inhibition (silmitasertib) | Reduction of mTORC1 activity. | Colorectal, squamous, lung | ( |
| Inhibition (TBB, siRNA) | HIF1α-regulated expression of aldolase and p53. | Hepatocellular, cervical | ( |
NE, not experimentally demonstrated for this cancer.
only suggested for ULK1.
Figure 1CK2 modulates the Warburg effect in cancer cells under unfavorable conditions. CK2 (PDB: 1JWH) may have a central role in regulating the activity and stability of various proteins including Akt, PTEN, β-catenin, and HIF-1α, under physiological and pathological conditions. CK2-dependent activation of the Wnt/β-catenin, PI3K/Akt/mTORC1, and p53/HIF-1α signaling pathways in cancer cells leads to a metabolic switch that supports proliferation and resistance to death due to either neoplastic drugs or an oxygen- and nutrient-deficient microenvironment, as a result of increased expression of genes that collectively enhance mitochondrial function and glucose metabolism. Altogether, this may be heavily altered upon inhibition with very specific compounds like the CK2 inhibitor, silmitasertib, or alternatively some miRNAs (more details in text). However, whether the latter are able to modulate metabolism and bioenergetics in cancer cells remains yet unknown.