| Literature DB >> 33801580 |
Abstract
Crk and CrkL are cellular counterparts of the viral oncoprotein v-Crk. Crk and CrkL are overexpressed in many types of human cancer, correlating with poor prognosis. Furthermore, gene knockdown and knockout of Crk and CrkL in tumor cell lines suppress tumor cell functions, including cell proliferation, transformation, migration, invasion, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, resistance to chemotherapy drugs, and in vivo tumor growth and metastasis. Conversely, overexpression of tumor cells with Crk or CrkL enhances tumor cell functions. Therefore, Crk and CrkL have been proposed as therapeutic targets for cancer treatment. However, it is unclear whether Crk and CrkL make distinct or overlapping contributions to tumor cell functions in various cancer types because Crk or CrkL have been examined independently in most studies. Two recent studies using colorectal cancer and glioblastoma cells clearly demonstrated that Crk and CrkL need to be ablated individually and combined to understand distinct and overlapping roles of the two proteins in cancer. A comprehensive understanding of individual and overlapping roles of Crk and CrkL in tumor cell functions is necessary to develop effective therapeutic strategies. This review systematically discusses crucial functions of Crk and CrkL in tumor cell functions and provides new perspectives on targeting Crk and CrkL in cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Crk; CrkL; cancer; cell proliferation; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; invasion; migration; transformation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33801580 PMCID: PMC8065463 DOI: 10.3390/cells10040739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Classification of cancers in which Crk and CrkL were studied for various tumor cell functions.
| Tumor Cell Function | Crk | CrkL | Crk and CrkL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell spreading | Breast [ | Glioblastoma [ | Glioblastoma [ |
| In vitro cell proliferation | Ovarian cancer [ | Lung [ | Glioblastoma [ |
| Anchorage-independent growth | Ovarian [ | Glioma [ | Breast [ |
| In vivo tumor growth | Ovarian [ | Head and neck [ | |
| Metastasis | Breast [ | Colorectal [ | |
| Migration and invasion | Bladder [ | Head and neck [ | Colorectal/pancreatic [ |
| Epithelial-mesenchymal transition | Bladder [ | Ovarian [ | Colorectal/pancreatic [ |
| Chemoresistance | Cervical [ | Colorectal [ | |
| Overexpression | Lung/gastric/breast [ | Lung [ | Ovarian [ |
| Lower survival | Oral squamous [ | Lung [ | Colorectal [ |
Studies in which Crk or CrkL was studied for the indicated tumor cell function are classified into cancer types and listed by year of publication of the earliest paper. References with the initial K indicate studies in which Crk or CrkL expression was decreased by gene knockdown or knockout. References in the initial O indicate studies in which Crk or CrkL was overexpressed. Despite an effort to be inclusive in choosing the references for citation, a few publications were excluded due to unclear results.
Figure 1Diagram of cancers that are dependent on Crk and CrkL for tumor cell migration and invasion. The studies of Crk and CrkL in tumor cell migration and invasion were sorted by distinguishing whether Crk or CrkL or both were investigated in a given study. Then the studies were grouped into cancer types. The numbers inside the parentheses indicate the number of publications. The group “Crk and CrkL” includes the studies in which individual and combined alterations of Crk and CrkL expression were conducted at the same time, and the results were compared. The group “Crk or CrkL” includes the studies in which an individual alteration of Crk or CrkL expression was conducted in multiple publications. The two numbers for the group “Crk or CrkL” indicate the number of publications for Crk plus the number of publications for CrkL. For example, glioblastoma has 3 publications for Crk and 1 publication for both Crk and CrkL.
Figure 2Diagram of cancers in which Crk and CrkL are overexpressed. The studies of Crk and CrkL protein expression in cancer tissues were sorted by distinguishing whether Crk or CrkL or both were investigated in a given study. Then the studies were grouped into cancer types. The numbers inside the parentheses indicate the number of publications. The group “Crk and CrkL” includes the studies in which overexpression of both Crk and CrkL was reported in a given study. The group “Crk or CrkL” includes the studies in which overexpression of Crk or CrkL expression was conducted in multiple publications. The two numbers for the group “Crk or CrkL” indicate the number of publications for Crk plus the number of publications for CrkL.
Figure 3Decreased overall survival of patients with increased CRK and CRKL transcripts. The curated set of non-redundant studies in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) was analyzed by the cBioPortal [104,105] for the correlation between copy number alterations and overall survival. The total number of cases and the median months overall for each group are presented in Table 2.
Overall survival of patients with gain or loss of Crk or CrkL transcripts.
| Copy Number Alteration | Total Number of Cases | Median Months Overall |
|---|---|---|
| Unaltered group | 21,270 | 118.30 |
| CRK: amplification | 69 | 46.78 |
| CRKL: amplification | 231 | 53.92 |
| CRK: heterozygous deletion | 5072 | 81.93 |
| CRK: homozygous deletion | 108 | 94.00 |
| CRKL: heterozygous deletion | 3542 | 71.17 |
| CRKL: homozygous deletion | 51 | 158.00 |
The curated set of non-redundant studies in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) was analyzed for copy number alterations by the cBioPortal [104,105]. The following Onco Query Language (OQL) queries were used in combinations to identify copy number alterations of Crk and CrkL: CRK: AMP, CrkL: AMP, CRK: HETLOSS, CRK: HOMDEL, CRKL: HETLOSS, and CRKL: HOMDEL. Depending on the OQL combination, the unaltered group ranged from 21,248 to 21,270 for the total number of cases and from 118.30 to 118.60 for the median months overall because of variations due to exclusion of overlapping samples and patients.