| Literature DB >> 32811566 |
Madiha Kanwal1, Michal Smahel2, Mark Olsen3,4, Jana Smahelova1, Ruth Tachezy1.
Abstract
As metastasis is a major cause of death in cancer patients, new anti-metastatic strategies are needed to improve cancer therapy outcomes. Numerous pathways have been shown to contribute to migration and invasion of malignant tumors. Aspartate β-hydroxylase (ASPH) is a key player in the malignant transformation of solid tumors by enhancing cell proliferation, migration, and invasion. ASPH also promotes tumor growth by stimulation of angiogenesis and immunosuppression. These effects are mainly achieved via the activation of Notch and SRC signaling pathways. ASPH expression is upregulated by growth factors and hypoxia in different human tumors and its inactivation may have broad clinical impact. Therefore, small molecule inhibitors of ASPH enzymatic activity have been developed and their anti-metastatic effect confirmed in preclinical mouse models. ASPH can also be targeted by monoclonal antibodies and has also been used as a tumor-associated antigen to induce both cluster of differentiation (CD) 8+ and CD4+ T cells in mice. The PAN-301-1 vaccine against ASPH has already been tested in a phase 1 clinical trial in patients with prostate cancer. In summary, ASPH is a promising target for anti-tumor and anti-metastatic therapy based on inactivation of catalytic activity and/or immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: ASPH; Immunotherapy; Metastasis; Small molecule inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32811566 PMCID: PMC7433162 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01669-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1ASPH catalytic reaction. Aspartyl and asparaginyl residues in cbEGF-like domains are hydroxylated
Summary of the studies, which have identified the elevated ASPH expression in human tumor tissues
| Study | Tumor tissues | Positive cases of studied samples (n/n) | Detection method | Antibody (recognized region of ASPH protein) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lavaissiere et al., [ | Hepatocellular | 4/10 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| Cholangiocarcinoma | 20/20 | |||
| Breast | 4/4 | |||
| Colon | 6/10 | |||
| Palumbo et al., [ | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | 19/19 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| Sepe et al., [ | Primitive neuroectodermal (medulloblastoma, neuroblastoma) | 28/28 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| Maeda et al., [ | Cholangiocarcinoma | 42/50 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| Cantarini et al., [ | Hepatocellular | 13/15 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) or 15C7 Ab (catalytic domain) |
| 13/15 (7.5-fold higher level of mRNA compared to normal tissue) | RT-qPCR | |||
| Monte et al., [ | Hepatocellular | 8/8 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| 8/8 (7-fold higher level of mRNA compared to normal tissue) | RT-qPCR | |||
| Yang et al., [ | 19 types of tumor tissuesa | 94/104 | IHC | mAb G3 hybridoma |
| Wang et al. | Hepatocellular | 150/233 | IHC | Polyclonal |
| Dong et al., [ | Pancreatic cancer | 101/104 | IHC | FB-50 mAb (N-terminus) |
| Tang et al., [ | Hepatocellular | 71/140 | RT-qPCR | |
| Lin et al., [ | Breast | 127/141 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
| Ogawa et al., [ | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | 162/166 | IHC | FB-50 Ab (N-terminus) |
aLiver, kidney, breast, cervical, ovarian, Fallopian tube, laryngeal, lung, thyroid, pancreatic, thymic, prostate, bladder, esophagus, gastric, gall bladder, colon, and rectum cancer and cholangiocarcinoma
Fig. 2Regulation of ASPH expression and ASPH involvement in signaling pathways. The expression of the ASPH protein can be regulated at several levels. The ASPH gene can be amplified in tumor cells and its transcription activated by IN/IGF-1 and Wnt/ β-catenin pathways or induced by hypoxia. At the posttranscriptional level, miR-200a and miR-135a can downregulate ASPH expression. Stability of the ASPH protein can be reduced by phosphorylation with GSK-3β. Conversely, ASPH can enhance GSK-3β activity by inhibition of its phosphorylation with AKT and p38 kinases. ASPH also supports cell proliferation, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, migration, invasion, and angiogenesis and consequently tumor growth and metastasis by hydroxylation of the Notch receptor and ligands (ex. JAG) and interaction with pRb, vimentin and ADAMs. Finally, inactivation of NK cells by ASPH has been demonstrated. Green arrow, activation signal; red bar, inhibitory signal
Fig. 3Small molecule inhibitors of ASPH
Fig. 4ASPH as a therapeutic target. ASPH expression is upregulated by growth factors and hypoxia. Its enzymatic activity can be inhibited by SMIs or monoclonal antibodies which results in reduction of cell proliferation, angiogenesis, immunosuppression, and cell migration and invasion. Consequently, tumor growth and metastasis are also reduced