| Literature DB >> 32782397 |
Huiping Liu1, Christian W Gruber2, Paul F Alewood1, Andreas Möller3, Markus Muttenthaler4,5.
Abstract
Breast cancer is making up one-quarter of all new female cancer cases diagnosed worldwide. Breast cancer surgeries, radiation therapies, cytotoxic chemotherapies and targeted therapies have made significant progress and play a dominant role in breast cancer patient management. However, many challenges remain, including resistance to systemic therapies, tumour recurrence and metastasis. The cyclic neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) elicits a plethora of biological responses via the oxytocin receptor (OTR) in both the central and peripheral nervous system, including social bonding, stress, maternal behaviour, sexual activity, uterus contraction, milk ejection and cancer. As a typical member of the G protein-coupled receptor family, OTR represents also an intriguing target for cancer therapy. There is emerging evidence that OTR plays a role in breast cancer development and progression, and several breast cancer cell lines express OTR. However, despite supporting evidence that OT lowers breast cancer risks, its mechanistic role in breast cancer development and the related signalling pathways are not fully understood. Here, we review the current knowledge of the OT/OTR signalling system in healthy breast tissue as well as in breast cancer, and discuss OTR as a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer management.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32782397 PMCID: PMC7483001 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-020-01415-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867
Fig. 1Oxytocin receptor in the female breast and its function in mediating milk letdown.
a Basic components of a mature female mammary gland, with black arrows indicating milk flow. b. Signal transduction mechanism of OTR during lactation. OTR coupling to Gαq/11 under the stimulation of OT activates phospholipase C (PLC), which hydrolyses phosphatidylinositol biphosphate (PIP2) to diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol triphosphate (IP3). DAG activates protein kinase C (PKC), while IP3 causes release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ store. Gαq/11 also causes activation of voltage- and agonist-regulated Ca2+ channels, which allow Ca2+ influx into the cells. Intracellular Ca2+ binds to calmodulin forming the Ca2+/calmodulin complex, which activates myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK), resulting in myoepithelial cell contraction. OTR and PKC can activate the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade, resulting in prostaglandin production, which also contributes to the contractile effect. Consequently, the alveolar milk is shifted to the cisternal space, drained into the lobule lumen towards the nipple through the lactiferous duct. The anatomy of the female breast presented in Fig. 1a was adapted from [71].
Overview of in vivo studies using OT analogues for breast cancer inhibition.
| Species | Cell lines | Treatment | Tumour reduction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse (BALB/c) | TS/A | OT pellet, steady 10−8 Ma (~0.58 μg/kg), 21 days | 50%b | [ |
| AT o.p., steady 10−9 M (~0.058 μg/kg) and 10−8 Ma (~0.58 μg/kg), 14 days | 65%, 72% | [ | ||
| Rat (Fisher) | D-R3230AC | OT o.p., steady 10−8 Ma (~0.64 μg/kg), 14 days | 74%c | [ |
| AT o.p., steady 10−9 M (~0.058 μg/kg) and 10−8 Ma (~0.58 μg/kg), 14 days | 66%, 90%c | |||
| Mouse (BALB/c) | MC4-L2 | OT, 0.03 μg/kg, daily i.p., 14 days | 82%b | [ |
| AT, 1.5 μg/kg, daily i.p., 14 days | No effect | |||
| Mouse (BALB/c) | MC4-L2 | OT, 30 nmol/kg (~30 μg/kg), daily i.p., 14 days | 49% volumeb | [ |
| AT, 1.5 μg/kg, daily i.p., 14 days | No effect | |||
| Athymic nude mice | MDA-MB-231 | [V4Q5]-desmopressin, 0.3 μg/kg i.v. thrice weekly, in combination or not with weekly cycles of paclitaxel (10 mg/kg i.p.) | Inhibition of tumour growth and invasion, and enhanced chemotherapy effects | [ |
| Mouse (BALB/c) | F3II | [V4Q5] Desmopressin, 0.3 μg/kg i.v. thrice weekly, in combination or not with weekly cycles of carmustine (20 mg/kg i.p.) |
OT oxytocin, molecular weight = 1007.2 g/mol; AT atosiban, molecular weight = 994.2 g/mol; mouse blood volume ~58 mL/kg, rat blood volume ~ 64 mL/kg; o.p. osmotic pump, i.p. intraperitoneal injection, i.v. intravenous injection, alkylating drug carmustine and antimitotic agent paclitaxel are clinical drugs for cancer cytotoxic therapy.
aSteady plasma concentration obtained by treatment (pellet or osmotic pump).
bNo exact number shown, calculated according to data or figure of publication.
cPercentage of tumour volume increase slower than controls, calculated from tumour volume increase compared with treatment day 1, tumour volume increase was 200% in controls, 52% in OT treated, 20% and 67% in AT 10–9 M and 10–8 M treated animals, all other inhibitory responses were compared with control group.
dMain receptor investigated was V2R, not OTR.
Effects of OT analogues on breast cancer cell proliferation in vitro.
| Cell lines | Ligands | Conditions | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HMEC, B-TEC | OT, 10−9–10−6 M | 10% FCS or serum free, medium changed every 48 h | Stimulation (proliferation & migration) | [ |
| MCF-7 | OT, 10−11–10−9 M | 2.5% FCS | Stimulation | [ |
| VP, 10−8 M | Inhibition | |||
| VP, 10−11–10−9 M | Stimulation | |||
| MCF-7 | OT, 10−7 M | 2% FCS in medium with E2 or CS-FCS in phenol red-free medium | Inhibition | [ |
| MCF-7, SK-BR-3 | VP, 10−8 M | 5% CS-FCS | Stimulation | [ |
| Desmopressin, 10−8 M | Inhibition | |||
| MDA-MB-231 | OT, 10−7 M | 10% FCS | Inhibition | [ |
| MDA-MB-231, MCF-7 | OT, 10−7 M | 10% FCS for 5 days | Proliferation inhibition, differentiation stimulation | [ |
| MDA-MB-231 | OT, 10−9 M, 10−8 M, 10−7 M AT, 10−8 M, 5 × 10−8 M | 5% FCS, medium changed every 24 h | Inhibition | |
| MCF-7, T47D | OT, 10−7 M, 10−8 M | 5% FCS, medium changed every 24 h | No effects | |
| 10% FCS, E2, TAM, medium changed every 24 h | Inhibition | |||
| MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-361, MDA-MB-468, MCF-7 | OT, 10−9 M, 10−7 M | 5% FCS | No effects | [ |
| Hs578T | OT, unspecified concentration | Not available | No significant short-term effects | [ |
| MCF7, TS/A (mouse) | LVT, 10−8 M, 10−7 M 10−6 M DOTA-LVT, 10−8 M, 10−7 M 10−6 M | 10% FCS | Inhibition No effects | [ |
| MDA-MB-231 TS/A (mouse) | OT, 10−8 M, 10−7 M | 10% FCS | Inhibition | [ |
| TS/A (mouse) D-R3230AC (rat) | OT, AT, 10−8 M | 10% FCS | Inhibition | [ |
| CMT-U27 (canine) | OT, Desmopressin, 10−6 M | 10% FBS | Inhibition | [ |
HMEC human dermal microvascular endothelial cells, B-TEC tumour-associated endothelial cells purified from human breast carcinomas, FCS (FBS) fetal calf (bovine) serum, CS-FCS charcoal-stripped FCS, E2 17β-estrodial, TAM tamoxifen, AT atosiban, OT oxytocin, VP vasopressin, only two amino acids different from OT at position 3 and 8, functions via vasopressin receptors V1aR, V1bR, and V2R, also can activate OTR; Desmopressin 1-(3-mercaptopropionic acid)−8-D-arginine-vasopressin (V1bR/V2R agonist), an analogue of VP with longer half-life and improved selectivity for V2R; LVT, Lys8-vasotocin, DOTA-LVT 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-N,N’,N”,N”’-tetraacetic acid (DOTA) Lys8-vasotocin.
aStudy focused on VP and its receptors.
bStudy developed a radio-labelled ligand targeting OTR-expressing tumours, proliferation effects of the two ligands were also assessed.
Fig. 2Schematic pathway diagram of G protein-dependent and β-arrestin-dependent signalling via OTR.
Upon agonist binding: (1) OTR signals via G proteins—the classic signalling route for Gαq/11 is activation of phospholipase C (PLC) thereby triggering phosphoinositide hydrolysis, calcium mobilisation and protein kinase A (PKA) activation. Gαs activates adenylate cyclase (AC), which in turn increases cAMP production, leading to the activation of cAMP-dependent PKA. The OTR/Gαs pathway (dashed lines) is not fully confirmed yet and requires further study. The classical signalling pathway for Gαi is inhibition of AC which leads to a decreased cAMP production and decreased PKA activity. (2) In addition, OTR can be phosphorylated at the C-terminus or at intracellular loops by GPCR kinases (GRK). (3) Once phosphorylated, OTR loses its affinity for the G proteins and gains affinity for β-arrestins. β-arrestins bound to OTR prevent further coupling of G proteins, a process known as desensitisation. (4) β-arrestins, through their interaction with clathrin and adaptor protein 2 (AP-2), target phosphorylated OTRs for endocytosis via clathrin-coated pits by scaffolding proteins of the internalisation machinery. (5) OTR can also activate β-arrestin-dependent signalling pathways. (6) Internalised OTRs move into early endosomes, of which some are sorted into recycling endosomes, where the ligand is metabolised and the receptors are dephosphorylated and recycled back to the cell surface (7), while others are sorted to late endosomes/lysosomes for degradation (8).
Fig. 3The structure and sequence of human OTR, with amino acids presented as single-letter codes.
Residues conserved within OTR and VPRs are coloured in black, residues conserved within the entire family of GPCRs are coloured in grey, putative N-glycosylation sites are coloured in brown, putative phosphorylation sites are coloured in blue, and putative phosphorylation sites overlapping with conserved residue within OTR and VPRs are coloured in blue and marked with an asterisk. The receptor scheme was adapted from GPCRdb website [133], the conserved residues were adapted from [4], and the putative phosphorylation sites were adapted from [111].