| Literature DB >> 32994684 |
Noémie Legrand1, Dan A Dixon2, Cyril Sobolewski3.
Abstract
Stress granules (SGs) represent important non-membrane cytoplasmic compartments, involved in cellular adaptation to various stressful conditions (e.g., hypoxia, nutrient deprivation, oxidative stress). These granules contain several scaffold proteins and RNA-binding proteins, which bind to mRNAs and keep them translationally silent while protecting them from harmful conditions. Although the role of SGs in cancer development is still poorly known and vary between cancer types, increasing evidence indicate that the expression and/or the activity of several key SGs components are deregulated in colorectal tumors but also in pre-neoplastic conditions (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease), thus suggesting a potential role in the onset of colorectal cancer (CRC). It is therefore believed that SGs formation importantly contributes to various steps of colorectal tumorigenesis but also in chemoresistance. As CRC is the third most frequent cancer and one of the leading causes of cancer mortality worldwide, development of new therapeutic targets is needed to offset the development of chemoresistance and formation of metastasis. Abolishing SGs assembly may therefore represent an appealing therapeutic strategy to re-sensitize colon cancer cells to anti-cancer chemotherapies. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on SGs in colorectal cancer and the potential therapeutic strategies that could be employed to target them. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Adenylate-Uridylate-rich element-binding proteins; Colorectal cancer; Oncogenes; Post-transcriptional regulation; Stress-Granules; Tumor suppressors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32994684 PMCID: PMC7504244 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i35.5223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Expression and prognostic value of stress granule-associated proteins in colorectal cancer
| Promotes SG assembly | Up | Unknown | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Up | Unknown | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Up (trend) | Down in 18.6% of patients[ | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Up | Unknown | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Unknown | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Down (trend) | sTIA1 (spliced variant) is Up[ | Poor prognosis with high expression | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Down (trend) | Unknown | Poor prognosis with high expression | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Poor prognosis with high expression[ | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Up | Unknown | NA | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Unknown | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Down (trend) | Down[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Unknown | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Up | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG clearance and SG-P-Bodies fusion | Down | Down[ | Poor prognosis with low expression ( | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG-P-Bodies fusion | Down | Unknown | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| mRNA stabilization | Up (trend) | Up[ | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| mRNA stabilisation | No significant difference | Down[ | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Up[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Unknown | No significant difference | Unknown | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG clearance | No significant difference | Up[ | No significant difference | Poor prognosis with high expression | |
| Inhibition of SG formation | Up (trend) | (Poor prognosis with high expression[ | Better prognosis with high expression (not significant: marked trend) | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Inhibition of SG formation | Up (trend) | Up[ | Better prognosis with high expression (not significant: marked trend | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | Down | Up[ | Poor prognosis with high expression (not significant: marked trend | Poor prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Down[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Inhibition of SG formation | No significant difference | Up[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Up[ | No significant difference but marked trend for a poor prognosis with high expression | No significant difference | |
| Inhibition of SG formation | Up (trend) | Up[ | No significant difference | Poor prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Up[ | No significant difference | Better prognosis with high expression | |
| Unclear | No significant difference | mTORC1 Up[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG assembly | No significant difference | Unknown | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Regulation of cell cycle | Down | Up[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Regulation of apoptosis | Up | No significant difference | No significant difference | ||
| Promotes SG disassembly | Down | Up[ | No significant difference | Poor prognosis with high expression | |
| Promotes SG disassembly | Down | Down[ | No significant difference | No significant difference | |
| Promotes SG disassembly | No significant difference | Up (poor prognosis with high expression)[ | No significant difference | No significant difference |
The differential mRNA expression of stress granule proteins in colorectal cancer as compared to matched non-tumoral tissues were retrieved from the GEPIA database (http://gepia.cancer-pku.cn/detail; normal tissues: n = 349; tumors: n = 275) and compared with published studies. Survival analyses were retrieved from the GEPIA (cutoff-High: 80%; cutoff-Low: 20%) and the Human Protein Atlas Database (https://www.proteinatlas.org) using the best separation method between low and high expression of protein candidates. SG: Stress granule; NA: Not available.
Figure 1The stress granule proteome contains several colorectal cancer-associated proteins. A: Venn diagram merging a list of colorectal cancer (CRC) -associated genes (retrieved from Metacore software) and the mammalian stress granule (SG) proteome from https://msgp.pt; B: Gene ontology analysis of SG proteome using KEGG pathway and biological processes analysis. Enrichment is represented with a-log10 P value. Processes and pathways in red are those involved in cancer development; C: Gene-Set Enrichment Analysis (version 3.0, Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA, United States) of the SG proteome on CRC patients (GSE113513). The top 20 genes upregulated in CRC patients as compared to non-tumoral tissues are represented in a heatmap. The enrichment score was calculated using the number of genes ranking at the top or the bottom of the gene list (permutation type: Phenotype; with 1000 permutations). The Signal2Noise was used for ranking genes. A nominal P value < 0.05 and an FDR < 0.2 were considered significant.
Potential therapeutic approaches to impair stress granule function in cancer cells
| EGCG | G3BP1 | Lung cancer[ | Reduction of SG assembly | Yes[ | NCT02891538; NCT02321969; NCT01239095 |
| Resveratrol | G3BP1 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | NCT00433576; NCT00920803 |
| GAP161 peptide | G3BP1 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| RK-33 | DDX3 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| EMICORON | G4DNA | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| chANG | angiogenin | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| (mAb), 26-2F | angiogenin | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| Compound C | AMPK | Yeast[ | Impairs SG assembly in yeast[ | Yes[ | None |
| Rapamycin | mTORC1 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | NCT00409994; NCT03439462 |
| Everolimus | mTORC1 | Breast[ | SG inhibition | Yes[ | NCT01154335; NCT00419159; NCT01387880 |
| Temsirolimus | mTORC1 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | NCT00593060; NCT00827684; NCT01183663 |
| OSS_128167 | SIRT6 | Pancreas cancer[ | Unknown | Unknown | No |
| A-452 | HDAC6 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| C1A | HDAC6 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| ACY-1215 | HDAC6 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| MPT0G612 | HDAC6 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| MS-444 | HuR | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| DHTS | HuR | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | None |
| Resveratrol | RBFOX2 | CRC[ | Unknown | Yes[ | NCT00433576; NCT00920803 |
| Paclitaxel | Microtubules | Green monkey kidney fibroblasts (CV-1 cells)[ | Promotes SG formation | Yes[ | NCT00598247; NCT00024401; NCT00667641 |
| Vinblastine | Microtubules | Green monkey kidney fibroblasts (CV-1 cells)[ | Prevents SG assembly | Yes[ | None |
Several approaches can be used to efficiently reduce stress granule assembly and their oncogenic activities. This table provides some examples for each strategy. Some of them have been tested in colorectal cancers models and others have reached clinical trials (https://clinicaltrials.gov/). SG: Stress granule; CRC: Colorectal cancer.
Figure 2The molecular landscape underlying stress granules formation in colorectal cancer. Stress granules (SGs) assembly in colorectal cancer cells is associated with several alterations in the expression of proteins involved in SG nucleation or clearance. The stress-related conditions within the tumor microenvironment and various antitumor agents can further promote SGs assembly. Several SG-associated proteins (RNA-binding proteins or others) contribute to various cancer-related processes such as cell cycle progression, apoptosis inhibition, angiogenesis, and chemoresistance. Illustrations were retrieved from Servier Medical art (https://smart.servier.com/). SG: Stress granules.