| Literature DB >> 32811512 |
Ta Xiao1, Yuhang Xiao2, Wenxiang Wang3,4, Yan Yan Tang4, Zhiqiang Xiao5, Min Su6,7.
Abstract
Eph receptors and the corresponding Eph receptor-interacting (ephrin) ligands jointly constitute a critical cell signaling network that has multiple functions. The tyrosine kinase EphA2, which belongs to the family of Eph receptors, is highly produced in tumor tissues, while found at relatively low levels in most normal adult tissues, indicating its potential application in cancer treatment. After 30 years of investigation, a large amount of data regarding EphA2 functions have been compiled. Meanwhile, several compounds targeting EphA2 have been evaluated and tested in clinical studies, albeit with limited clinical success. The present review briefly describes the contribution of EphA2-ephrin A1 signaling axis to carcinogenesis. In addition, the roles of EphA2 in resistance to molecular-targeted agents were examined. In particular, we focused on EphA2's potential as a target for cancer treatment to provide insights into the application of EphA2 targeting in anticancer strategies. Overall, EphA2 represents a potential target for treating malignant tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; EphA2 receptor; Ephrin A1; Target; Therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32811512 PMCID: PMC7433191 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-020-00944-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Historical development and breakthroughs in targeting EphA2 in cancer
Fig. 2Expression and biological pathways linked with EphA2. The interaction of cell-membrane-bound EphA2 with ephrin A1 induces forward or reverse signals in the corresponding cells. Under normal conditions, cell–cell contacts allow EphA2 to interact with ephrin A1, which induces EphA2 phosphorylation and activates its downstream signaling. Tyrosine phosphorylation of EphA2 promotes the generation of a complex with c-Cbl, subsequently induces EphA2 degradation. This leads to suppression of ECM attachment, cell proliferation, cell migration, and angiogenesis. In the malignant state, loss of cell–cell contacts induces receptor-ligand interaction and degradation of EphA2. In addition, tyrosine phosphorylation of EphA2 could be rapidly reversed by the phosphatase LMW-PTP, further leading to the overexpression and accumulation of unphosphorylated form of EphA2. This leads to promotion of ECM attachment, cell proliferation, cell migration, and angiogenesis
Summary of EphA2 targeted therapies against cancer
| Mechanism | Method or compound | Cancer type | Exact effects on EphA2 | Effects in vitro | Effects in vivo | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPHARNA | Ovarian cancer | Decrease in vivo EphA2 expression | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| Ephrin A1 | Glioblastoma multiforme | Induce EphA2 internalization and downregulation | Inhibit cell migration | [ | ||
| Monomeric ephrin A1 | Breast cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation | – | – | [ | |
| Ephrin A1-Fc | Pancreatic cancer | Induce EphA2 degradation | Inhibit cell motility and invasion | – | [ | |
| Ephrin A1-Fc | Gastric cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation | Inhibit cell growth | – | [ | |
| EA1.2 | Breast cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation | Inhibit cell growth, disrupt angiogenesis | – | [ | |
| EA2 and B233 | Breast cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation | inhibit tumor growth in vivo | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| D2 scFv | Lymphoma | Prevent EphA2-ephrin interaction | Inhibit cell proliferation, induce apoptosis | – | [ | |
| SHM16 | Melanoma | Antibody internalization | Inhibit cell migration and invasion | – | [ | |
| DS-8895a | Breast cancer and gastric cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| DS-8895a | Breast cancer and gastric cancer | – | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| 3F2-3M | Breast, ovarian, non-small cell lung cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation | Kill tumor cells in vitro | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| EphA2-Fc | Pancreatic | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit angiogenesis | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| Lithocholic acid | Prostate and colon cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit cell rounding, retraction | – | [ | |
| UniPR126 | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit cell rounding, retraction | – | [ | |
| UniPR126 | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | – | – | [ | |
| UniPR129 | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation and block kinase domain enzymatic activity | Inhibit cell rounding, disrupt angiogenesis | [ | ||
| UniPR1331 | Prostate cancer | block EphA2 phosphorylation and activation | Disrupt angiogenesis | – | [ | |
| Cholanic acid | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit cell retraction | – | [ | |
| GW4064 | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | – | – | [ | |
| 76D10 | Prostate cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit cell retraction | – | [ | |
| Dasatinib | Melanoma | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation and kinase activity | Inhibit cell migration and invasion | – | [ | |
| Dasatinib | Pancreatic cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation and kinase activity | Inhibit cell growth | – | [ | |
| Candidate 4a | Glioblastoma | – | Inhibit cell survival | – | [ | |
| ALW-II-41-27 | Non-small cell lung cancer | Inhibit EphA2 phosphorylation | Inhibit cell survival | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| ALW-II-41-27 | Lung cancer | – | Inhibit cell survival, proliferation, migration, increased apoptosis | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| Ephrin A1–PE38QQR | Glioblastoma multiforme | Decrease EphA2 expression | Inhibit cell survival | – | [ | |
| MEDI-547 | Prostate cancer | Induce EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation | Inhibit cell survival | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| MEDI-547 | Endometrial cancer | Induce EphA2 internalization and degradation | Inhibit cell survival, induce apoptosis | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| MEDI-547 | Ovarian cancer | Induce EphA2 degradation | Inhibit cell survival and proliferation, induce apoptosis | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| YTPL | Melanoma | – | Inhibit cell survival | – | [ | |
| MM-310 | Breast, prostate, gastric, and esophageal cancer | – | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| DC-vaccine | Colon cancer (murine) | – | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| DC-vaccine | Colon cancer (murine) and melanoma (human) | – | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| CAR T cells | Glioblastoma | Decrease EphA2 expression | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| CAR T cells | Glioma | – | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| CAR T cells | Lung cancer | – | Inhibit cell survival | Inhibit tumor growth | [ | |
| CAR T cells | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | – | Inhibit cell survival | – | [ | |
Fig. 3Targeting EphA2 in cancer. EphA2’s expression patterns and functional relevance in malignancies make this protein an attractive therapeutic target in cancer. Accordingly, EphA2 overexpression has been targeted with several approaches such as decrease EPHA2 expression, promote EphA2 degradation, block endogenous EphA2 activation, EphA2 as drug delivery target, EphA2-based immunotherapy, and EphA2-based combination therapeutics
Combination therapeutics based on EPHA2 targeting
| Drug | Cancer type | Effects in vitro | Effects in vivo | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALW-II-41-27 + WW437 | Breast cancer | Inhibit cell viability and migration | - | [ |
| ALW-II-41-27 + cetuximab | CRC | Inhibit cell growth, induce apoptosis and cell cycle arrest, revert resistance to cetuximab | Inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| siRNA+ cisplatin/etoposide/minustine hydrochloride | Glioma | Induce cytotoxicity | - | [ |
| UniPR1331 + bevacizumab | Glioblastoma | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| DS-8895a + cisplatin | Gastric cancer | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| EphA2-ILs-DTXp + PD-1 inhibitors | Breast cancer (mouse) | – | Inhibit tumor growth | [ |
Key clinical trials of EphA2 targeted therapy in cancer
| Agent or approaches | Trial identifier | Study characteristics | Intervention | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MEDI-547 | NCT00796055 | Phase 1, EphA2-positive solid tumor | IV infusion with MEDI-547 0.08 mg/kg on day 1 of 21-day cycle Primary outcome: safety and tolerability | Terminated |
| DS-8895a | NCT02252211 | Phase 1, EphA2-positive solid tumor | Infusion with ^89Zr-Df-DS-8895a 0.2 mg/kg i.v on day 1. DS-8895a 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg on days 8 and 22, and ^89Zr-Df-DS-8895a 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg on day 36 Primary outcome: toxicity | Completed |
| DS-8895a | NCT02004717 | Phase 1, Solid tumor | Step 1: IV infusion with DS-8895a 0.1, 0.3, 1, 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg on day 1 of 14-day cycle; step 2: IV infusion with DS-8895a 20 mg/kg on day 1 of 14-day cycle Primary outcome: toxicity, serum pharmacokinetics | Completed |
| CAR-T cell | NCT02575261 | Phase 1/2, EphA2-positive glioma | Primary outcome: effectiveness | Completed |
| CAR-T cell | NCT03423992 | Phase 1, Recurrent glioma | Primary outcome: adverse events | Ongoing |
| BT5528 | NCT04180371 | Phase 1/2, Solid tumor | IV infusion of BT5528 once a week (days 1, 8, 15, and 22) on a 4-week cycle with or without 480 mg nivolumab Primary outcome: safety, MDT | Ongoing |
| SiRNA-EphA2-DOPC | NCT01591356 | Phase 1, Advanced solid tumor | IV infusion of siRNA-EphA2-DOPC on days 1 and 4 of 21-day cycle Primary outcome: safety, MDT, and ORR | Ongoing |
| MM-310 | NCT03076372 | Phase 1, Solid tumor | IV infusion of MM-310 on day 1 of 21-day cycle Primary outcome: MDT | Ongoing |
| Vaccine | NCT02754362 | Phase 2, Recurrent glioblastoma | Block 1: bevacizumab every 2 weeks for 2 doses; block 2: vaccine + poly-ICLC + bevacizumab on weeks 1, 3, 5, and 7; block 3: vaccine + poly-ICLC monthly and bevacizumab every 2 weeks for 10 months Primary outcome: immune response, tumor response | Active, not recruiting |