| Literature DB >> 33958005 |
Avantika Tripathi1, Anjali Kashyap2, Greesham Tripathi1, Joni Yadav3, Rakhi Bibban3, Nikita Aggarwal3, Kulbhushan Thakur3, Arun Chhokar3, Mohit Jadli3, Ashok Kumar Sah4,5, Yeshvandra Verma6, Hatem Zayed7, Amjad Husain8,9, Alok Chandra Bharti10, Manoj Kumar Kashyap11,12.
Abstract
Reversion of tumor to a normal differentiated cell once considered a dream is now at the brink of becoming a reality. Different layers of molecules/events such as microRNAs, transcription factors, alternative RNA splicing, post-transcriptional, post-translational modifications, availability of proteomics, genomics editing tools, and chemical biology approaches gave hope to manipulation of cancer cells reversion to a normal cell phenotype as evidences are subtle but definitive. Regardless of the advancement, there is a long way to go, as customized techniques are required to be fine-tuned with precision to attain more insights into tumor reversion. Tumor regression models using available genome-editing methods, followed by in vitro and in vivo proteomics profiling techniques show early evidence. This review summarizes tumor reversion developments, present issues, and unaddressed challenges that remained in the uncharted territory to modulate cellular machinery for tumor reversion towards therapeutic purposes successfully. Ongoing research reaffirms the potential promises of understanding the mechanism of tumor reversion and required refinement that is warranted in vitro and in vivo models of tumor reversion, and the potential translation of these into cancer therapy. Furthermore, therapeutic compounds were reported to induce phenotypic changes in cancer cells into normal cells, which will contribute in understanding the mechanism of tumor reversion. Altogether, the efforts collectively suggest that tumor reversion will likely reveal a new wave of therapeutic discoveries that will significantly impact clinical practice in cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: PTMs; Phenotype reversion; Revertant; SIAH1; TCTP1; Tumor reversion
Year: 2021 PMID: 33958005 PMCID: PMC8101112 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-021-00280-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
List of molecules directly or indirectly involved in process of tumor reversion (phenotype from tumor to normal) in human and mouse cancer cell lines/models
| Name of Molecule | Gene Symbol | Experimental Settings | Type of Malignancy | Findings of the Study | Relevant Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Translationally controlled tumor protein (TCTP) | H1 parvovirus was used for preparing the revertants. TCTP was inhibited using anti-sense oligonucleotide or disruptive small RNA molecules | Breast (BT20, T47D, and MDA-MB-231) and leukemia (K562 and U937) | Reduction of TPT1/TCTP expression by anti-sense cDNA and siRNA in various breast cancer and leukemia cell lines was observed and the study concluded that TCTP gene downregulation is necessary for tumor reversion or to have a suppressed tumor phenotype. | Tuynder et al 2002 [ | |
| Seven in absentia homolog 1 (E3 ubiquitinprotein ligase) | H1 parvovirus was used for preparing the revertants. | Breast (BT20, T47D, and MDA-MB-231) and leukemia (K562 and U937) | Tuynder et al 2002, [ | ||
| Presenilin 1 | The anti-sense complementary to PSEN1 was stable transfected in U937 cells. | Leukemic (K562 & U937) | Roperch et al 1998, [ | ||
| Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 | Multiple myeloma cell line (RPMI8226) was infected with H1 parvovirus to make the revertant. The parental cells vs revertant cells compared using in vivo proteomics labeling technique SILAC followed by LCMS/MS analysis. | Multiple myeloma (RPMI8226) | The revertant cell line has a suppressed tumor characteristic compared to the parent cell line. Inhibition of STAT3 suppresses malignant phenotype, and induces apoptosis in vitro and in vivo state. | Ge et al 2010, [ | |
| K-rev-1 (RAP1A) GTPase | Upon prolonged of PC3 cells with Azatyrosine, resistant clones were obtained and analyzed in both in vitro as well as in vivo conditions. | Prostate Cancer cell lines (TSU-Prl, DU-145, and PC-3) | The resistant PC3 clones showed very low number of colony forming ability, and complete loss of tumorigenicity observed in one clone. Further, KREV-1 expression was high in revertant as compared with parental cell line further confirmed induction of tumor reversion due to azatyrosine. | Benoit et al 1995, [ | |
| Rhoassociated protein kinase | The inhibitors of ROCK as well as of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase inhibitors can substitute for all transcription factors (TFs) to be sufficient to reprogram breast cancer cells into progenitor cells. | Breast Cancer (MDA-MB-468, MDA-MB-231, and HCC2157) | In vitro and in vivo tumorigenesis tests have shown that induced fat-like cells lose proliferation and tumorigenicity. Reprogramming was possible by phenotypic changes by using ROCK–mTOR kinase inhibitors in breast cancer cell line that are induced progenitor-like cells (iPLs). These inhibitors prohibit locally the recurrence in mouse model. | Yuan et al 2018, [ | |
| Breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility protein 1 | Targeted NGS was applied using circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) isolated from pre and postprogression plasma samples derived from high-grade ovarian carcinoma (HGOC) to profile BRCA mutations in rucaparib (PARP inhibitor) | Ovarian cancer | An important resistance mechanism to platinum-based chemotherapies and PARP inhibitors in | Lin et al 2019 [ | |
| SET Domain Bifurcated 1 (Transcription regulatory protein) | The gene regulatory network (GRNs) analysis in previously datasets led to identification of identify core TFs (CDX2, ELF3, HNF4G, PPARG, and VDR) that control the cellular state. | Colorectal cancer cell lines (Caco2, HCT116, SW480, and SW620) | RNAseq analysis of single cell, showed upregulation of SETDB1 expression in stem like cancerous cells as compare with normal cells, and an elimination of SETDB1 in Caco2 cells shows KRT20+ population. This depletion led to changes of stem cancer cell phenotype into post-mitotic cells and led to restorage of normal morphology in colon cancer patient derived organoid. | Lee et al 2020, [ | |
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (Tyrphostin AG 1478), Specific MAPK inhibit (PD98059), and I3K inhibitor (LY294002) were use to tre t the brea t ca er cell line. | Breast cancers (MCF7, HS578T, and MDA-MB-231) | An overexpression of E-cadherin gave rise to partial reversion, but when these transfected cells supplemented with beta1 integrin, PI3K or MAPK inhibitors, complete tumor reversion was achieved in MDA-MB-231 & MCF7. | Wang et al 2002, [ | ||
| Homeobox D10 (Transcription factor) | Manipulation of MDA-MB-231 (breast cancer cell line) to restore the HOXD10 expression using retroviral gene expression system in a three-dimensional laminar pattern (3DlrBM). | Breast Cancer (MDA-MB-231) | Restorations of HOXD10 expression led to decreased expression of A3 integrin and reduced cellular proliferation and the cells were able to form acinar structures polarized in nature. Additionally, HOXD10 expression led to inhibition of tumorigenesis induced by MDA-MB-231 in mouse xenografts. | Carrio et al 2005, [ | |
| Matrix Metalloprotein ase9 | An MMP9 inhibitor GM6001 and another inhibitor of clinical grade (Marimastat) were tested for cellular behavior in 3D culture. | Breast Cancer (S1 and T4–2 cells of the HMT3522) | Both the agents were able to induce tumor reversion as compared with the control in these cell lines as evident with the morphological changes. | Beliveau et al 2010, [ | |
| Mitogenactivated protein kinase. | Different isogenic variants of MCF10A were treated using MEKi inhibitor PD032590. | Transformed variants (isogenic cell lines in MCF10A, a normal human breast epithelial cell line) with different tumorigenic potential were used. | The MEKi inhibitor reverted the surfaceome changes in MCF10A cell line. Among isogenic variants of MCF10A, the most sensitive to MEKi were MEKDD, BRAFV600E, and EGFRL858R | Leung et al 2020, [ | |
| YB-1 ( Transcription factor) | Genome editing technique CRISPR/Cas9 was used to knockout. | Melanoma (MDA-MB-435), and MCF-7 | Quashing of YBX1 led to inhibition of not only proliferation but also cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in melanoma as well as in breast cancer cells and generates inevitable cancer stem cell differentiation. This leads to reduce tumorigenic potential of CSCs in in vitro as well as in vivo conditions. | Yang et al 2019,[ | |
| Lipogenic enzyme fatty acid synthase (FASN) | Short hairpin RNA (shRNA) based inhibition of FASN | MCF10A progression series (MCF10A untransformed cells, MCF10AneoT and MCF10AT non-malignant cells, | The Inhibition of FASN lead to suppression of lipogenesis in CA1d cells and also induced reversion of these cells into nonmalignant phenotype in breast cancer cells. | Gonzalez-Guerrico et al. 2016,[ | |
| Retinoic acid receptor α (RARα) | RARα | RARα agonist Am580 (4-[(5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-5,5,8,8-tetramethyl2-naphthyl)carboxamido]benzoic acid) | MMTV-Myc female mice fed on 0.3 mg/kg/day diet with RARα agonist | The RARα activation induce reexpression of CRBP1 which leads to reversion of the malignant phenotype. | Bosch et al 2012,[ |
Fig. 1Different molecular alterations involved in tumor reversion. Molecular mechanism of tumor reversion involving different alternations including PTMs such as phosphorylation, glycosylation, and other molecular changes such as microRNAs, transcription factors, RNA splicing events, the impact of the tumor microenvironment, tumor-associated macrophages, and epigenetic modifications. The arrow with an upward direction (↑) denotes an increase in the expression, and the arrow with a downward direction (↓) denotes a decrease in the expression. In the figure, gene symbols in italic means denoting gene/mRNA, and non-italic means denoting protein
Fig. 2Protein Architecture of different proteins involved in the tumor reversion. Using the human protein reference database, the architecture of proteins involved in tumor reversion or phenotypic tumor reversion has been shown include TPT1, SIAH1, TSAP6, SETDB1, YBX1, HOXD10, PSEN1, KREV-1, ITGB1, and STAT3
Fig. 3The mRNA expression of TPT1 across different normal human tissues. An mRNA expression of the TPT1 gene has been shown across all possible normal human tissue samples including (from left-➔ to right) appendix, bone marrow, brain, colon, duodenum, endometrium, esophagus, gall bladder, heart, kidney, liver, lung, lymph node (LN), ovary, pancreas, placenta, prostate, salivary gland, skin, small intestine, spleen, stomach, testis, thyroid, and urinary bladder. The value of the expression is shown in form of Reads Per Kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads (RPKM), which are the normalized unit for denoting transcript expression
Post-translational modification, and other molecular events involved in tumor reversion
| Name of Molecule | Gene Symbol | Post-translational / posttranscriptional Regulation | Type of Cancer | Drug Agents | Impact of PTM on Tumor Reversion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retinoblastoma (RB) | RB1 | Phosphorylation | Breast Cancer (MCF-7) | Axolotl Oocyte Extracts (AOE) | pRB and it’s nuclear localization reduced upon extract treatment, but not of CDKN1B (p27) in early hrs (6 h), but increased 12 h post-treatment. During reprogramming, induction of cell cycle arrest occurs during the process in oocyte extracts and it is stably maintained in treated tumor xenografts, and reprogrammed tumors showed reduced phosphorylation of RB at S780. | Saad et al 2018, [ |
| CDKN1B | p27 | Phosphorylation | MDA-MB-468 and MDA-MB-231 (Human breast cancer lines), and murine NIH/3T3 cells. | GGTI-2418 | In normal cells, p27 inhibits nuclear Cdk activities and is thus considered a tumor suppressor. p27 expression is essential for tumor reversion. Phosphorylation at pY74 & pY88 of p27 activates p27 bound Cdk2/cyclin E complexes, which in turn transform p27 from an inhibitor of Cdk2 inhibitor to a Cdk2 substrate and eventually increases p27 expression. | Kazi et al 2009, [ |
| GATA binding protein 1 | GATA1 | Phosphorylation and Acetylation | Cos 7 and NIH/3T3 Cells. | Tylase Inhibitor Trichostat in A (TSA). | Effect of different agents was tested on GATA-1 modifications in COS7 and NIH/3T3 cell line. Both SCF and erythropoietin elevated phosphorylation of GATA-1. The mutations in the phospho-site abrogated the phosphorylation shifts and protein turnover. Consistent with the idea that both acetylation and phosphorylation are required for turnover. The acetylation mutants were observed to be stable under mitogen stimulatory conditions and, moreover, that mitogen stimulation preferentially leads to the degradation of acetylated GATA-1. | Hernandez et al 2006, [ |
| Protein kinase D1 | PRKD1 | DNA methylation | Breast Cancer cell lines (MDA-MB-231). | Bisulfite Sequencing | Inhibition of methylation of the PRKD1 promoter with DNA methyltransferase inhibitors can lead to re-expression of PKD1 and reversion of the invasive phenotype | Borges et al 2013, [ |
| Glutathione S-transferase P1 | GSTP1 | Methylation | LNCaP human PCA cells | Procainamide | LNCaP PCA cells expressing GSTP1 appeared only after decreased GSTP1 promoter methylation (antagonistic to gene expression) after prolonged 5-aza-C exposure (for many generations), 5-aza-Ctreated LNCaP PCA cells that had unmethylated GSTP1 promoter expressing | Lin et al 2001 [ |
| RARB, CST6, CDKN2A and CCND2 | RARB, CST6, CDKN 2A and CCND 2 | Demethylation | MCF-7 & HCC1954 cell lines | Amphibian Oocyte Extracts ( AOE). | AOE induced higher demethylation levels for RARB and CST6 promoters than AOE, but CDKN2A and CCND2 showed similar levels of demethylation by either extract. Interestingly, embryonic stem cells extract (ESCE) can slightly induce RARB and CDKN2A demethylation, which is consistent with the inability of this extract to re-activate their expression. Demethylation of CGs from 8 to 13 was found for RARB, CGs 1–8, 14–18, 25 and 31 for CST6, CGs 1–7, and 21–28 for CCND2, and CGs 1–9 and 19–28 for CDKN2A. | Allegrucci et al 2011 [ |
| Glycodelin (Progestagen Associated Endometrial Protein, PAEP or Placental Protein 14) | PP14 | Deglycosylation | HEC-1B cells (ATCC HTB-113) | Glycodelin Isoform, Glycodelin-A (GdA) | Using enzymatic deglycosylation and/or differentially glycosylated glycodelin isoforms, it was observed that GdA help proliferating PBMC, trophoblast invasion was glycosylation dependent. Regardless of the differences in glycosylation between GdA and HEC-1B, both of them inhibited trophoblast invasion in a comparable potency. | Hautala et al 2020, [ |
| Sialidase | NEU1 | Murine melanoma variant B16-BL6 (B16 murine melanoma) | Lysosomal Sialidase | Sialidase impact was studied by using | Kato et al 2001, [ | |
| Focal adhesion kinase 1 | FAK | Phosphorylation | Lewis Lung Carcinoma cells (LLC) | FAKY861 | Vessel regression can be determined and the study used the mouse model and concluded that the pY861 site phosphorylation is crucial in blood vessel regression in the tumor phenotype in Pdgfr b Cre+; FAKY861F/Y861F mice. | Lees et al 2020 [ |
| Tumor Protein TP53 | P53 | DNA methylation | K7M2 and K12 (murine osteosarcoma) cell populations with differing metastatic potentials (K7M2 is highly metastatic to the lung but K12 is less metastatic) | Chick Embryo Extract (CEE) | CEE extract able to revert the DNA methylation | Mu et al 2014 [ |
| Ganglioside Monosialic 2 / Ganglioside Monosialic 3 | GM2/G M3 | Silylation / Phosphorylation | Bladder cancer cells | Anti-GD2 monoclonal Antibodies | GM3 or GM2 gangliosides induced reversion from oncogenic to normal phenotypes via formation of a complex of tetraspanin CD9 or CD82 in the microdomains. Once GM3/CD9/integrin α3 complex formed in Bladder cells, tumor cells’s phenotype suppressed. GM2 and CD82 together inhibits tyrosine kinase activity upon interaction with MET. Also the cross talk between integrin with Met33. Gangliosides with high levels of silylated. Gangliosides control integrin α5β1-mediated epithelial cells adhesion to FN (fibronectin) via carbohydrate-carbohydrate interactions. | Tsuchida et al 2018 [ |
| Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor 2A (CDKN2A) | CDKN2A or P16 | Demethylation | Different tumor types including gastric, colonic, ovarian, breast, renal, lung cancer & melanoma. | DNMT1 Inhibitor (MG98) | MG98 is an anti-sense oligonucleotide binds to 3′-UTR of DNMT1 in human cells, and that results in demethylation of selected genes by reducing the CpG island and allowing the tumor suppressor genes to re-express. | Plummer et al 2009 [ |
Animal models used for different malignancies in studying tumor biology (other than tumor reversion)
| Model Type | Malignancy | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| CC10-rtTA; (tetO7)CMV-K RasG12D (Transgenic) | Lung Cancer | Bronchogenic adenocarcinomas. Phenotype is completely reversible upon Dox removal. | Fisher et al 2001 [ |
| KPC Mouse model | Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma | It develops important key features observed in human PDA including pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia alongside a robust inflammatory reaction including exclusion of effector T cells. KPC mouse contains a conditional point mutation in the transformation related protein 53 gene TP53R172H), and a point mutation in KRAS gene (KRASG12D) both of which generate non-functional proteins. | Hingorani et al 2005 [ |
| NSG mice (NOD.Cg- | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Subcutaneous treatment with pharmacological inhibitor entospletinib (GS-9973) for 10 days led to reduction in tumor growth by 55%. | Barbhuiya et al 2018 [ |
| NOD-SCID mice implantation with MDA-MD-231 | Breast Cancer | hMAb173 treatment led to 60% reduction in the TNBC tumor growth compared to the control group. The microscopic study revealed that hMAb173 treatment effectively degraded AXL in tumor cells. | Wu et al 2015 [ |
| Eμ-Tcl-1 transgenic mouse model | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | The TCL1 gene of human origin under the control of the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region promoter and immunoglobulin heavy chain enhancer (Eμ-Tcl-1). The model is time consuming due to disease delayed development, and TCL1 overexpression does not allow relextion of the genetic complexity of CLL. | Bichi et al 2002 [ |
| human/mouse radiation chimera | CLL | Transplantation of CLL PBMC into peritoneal cavity of irradiated Balb/c or BNX mice, radio-protected with bone marrow from SCID mice. | Shimoni et al 1997 [ |
| NOD/SCID | CLL | Transplantation of CLL PBMC in NOD/SCID mice and combining intravenously and in transperitoneally injection.. However, these mice still retain normal natural killer (NK), and myeloid cells, and these cells were likely responsible for interfering with the in vivo engraftment of some human leukemia’s/lymphomas. | Durig et al 2007 [ |
| Transgenic mice model with human MET in hepatocytes under the control of tetracycline | Hepatocellular carcinoma | In this study, early deaths prevented by feeding the mating parents and newborn pups doxycycline to repress expression of the MET transgene. Continued expression of MET is required for maintaining HCC. | Wang et al 2001 [ |
| Transgenic mice model expressing | Lung adenocarcinoma | DOX induction after two months led to development of adenoma, and adenocarcinoma of lungs, but removal of DOX in contrast caused rapid downregulation of mutant KRas RNA and auxillary apoptotic regression of an early proliferative lesions as well as tumors. | Fisher et al 2001 [ |
| K14-rtTA/TetRE-ErbB2 ‘Tet-On’ bitransgenic mouse system | Skin carcinoma | Until ErbB2 expression induced by doxycycline (Dox), the animals were normal, but prenatal induction led to death. Skin hyperplasia observed in animals after two days, and Dox withdrawal reverted these changes to normal. | Xie et al 1999 [ |
Fig. 4The chemical structures of compounds used for induce tumor reversion. A number of compounds have been used for reverting the phenotype of a tumor into normal. The structure of the following compounds have been drawn here using ChemDraw: Ellipticine, E7107, LY294002, Metformin, PD0325901, PD98059, Sertraline, Thiazolidinedione, Thioridazine, GGTI-2417, and GM6001
In vitro, 3D culture, and in vivo models used for studying tumor reversion
| Model Systems | In vivo/ 3-D / In vitro | Cell Line/Tissue | Observation regarding tumor reversion | Drug Agent/Viral strain | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSV transformed 3 T3 cell line based Mouse Model | In vivo | Murine Sarcoma Virus transformed mouse 3 T3 cells | Murine sarcoma virus-transformed mouse NIH/3T3 cells (negative for the murine leukemia virus) give rise to a sarcoma virus upon superinfection of murine leukemia virus. The revertants support leukemia virus growth and show enhanced sensitivity to murine sarcoma superinfection and, like normal cells, do not release RNA-dependent DNA polymerase activity. | Murine Leukemia Virus (MuLV) | Fischinger et al 1972, [ |
| Twenty four acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) patients | In vivo | Human APL | APL patients treated with all-trans retinoic acid attained complete remission without developing bone marrow hypoplasia, and a gradual terminal differentiation in bone marrow derived tumor cells was observed as evident due to presence of Auer rods in mature granulocytes, followed by the re-emergence of normal hematopoietic cells upon remission. | Retinoic Acid (45 to 100 mg/m2/day) | Huang et al 1988, [ |
| Transgenic Mice Model (MTA transgene) | In vivo | Mice carrying the tetracyclineresponsive trans activator (tTA) gene (MTA transgene) | Controlled expression of simian virus 40 T antigen (Tag) in the submandibular gland of transgenic mice four months from the time of birth induced cellular transformation and extensive ductal hyperplasia. Silencing of Tag led to reversal of hyperplasia for 3 weeks, but NOT after seven months as hyperplasia persistence was observed. Reversal of ploidy in ductal cells was possible in 4 months old animals, and observed to remains polyploidy at the age of 7 months even when devoid of TAg. | Simian Virus 40 (SV40) | Ewald et al 1996, [ |
| BCR–ABL1-(tTA) induced Double Transgenic Mice Model | In vivo | Double transgenic mice (BCR–ABL1-tetracycline transactivator (tTA)) | Withdrawal of tetracycline administration from double transgenic animals (BCR–ABL1-tetracycline transactivator (tTA) permits BCR-ABL1 expression and cause lethal leukemia. The rapid disappearance of leukemic cells from the blood suggested apoptosis rather than differentiation as the underlying mechanism for reversing the phenotype in this model. A constitutive BCR–ABL1 expression is crucial for maintaining the cancer of hematopoietic system and phenotype of the leukemic cells is completely reversible at the advanced stages of the disease. | Withdrawal of Tetracycline | Huettner et al 2000, [ |
| Polyoma transformed hamster embryo cell model | In vivo | Hamster embryo cells (transformed by polyoma virus inoculated with large plaque virus LPll) | Hamster embryonic cell transformed using polyomavirus after inoculating with large virus LP-II plaque. A high frequency of variants with reversion phenotype observed in transformed cells. | Carmine | Rabinowitz et al 1968, [ |
| MGI (macrophages and granulocyte inducer) grafted mice model | In vivo | Human and mice myleoid leukemia cells | Chromosomal studies of MGI + D+ leukemic cells showed that all the chromosomes could still be persuaded to develop a normal differentiation phenotype without a completely normal complement. Reversion of the phenotype of malignant cells with standard growth control without a completely normal chromosome complement was observed in other cell types as well. | Grafting of MGI producing cells | Sachs et al 1978, [ |
| SCID Mice for making tumors derived from K562 and KS cells | In vivo | K562 leukemia cells and the clone KS resistant to cytopathic effect of H1 parvovirus | H-1 parvovirus preferentially kills neoplastic cells, and therefore used for selecting cells with the suppressed phenotype. KS (a cell line derived from K562) resistan to cytopathic effect of the H-1 virus displays a suppressed malignant phenotype. This and cellular resistance to H-1 killing appear to depend on the activity of wild-type p53. | H-1 parvovirus | Telerman et al 1993 [ |
| 3D In vitro Culture system ‘on top’ and disease-on-achip (DOC) | In vitro, DOC model to mimic TME. | Pre-invasive (S2 cells) and invasive (T4–2 and MDA-MB-231 Cell line) | The DOC model used for the breast cancer cells with varied tumorigenecity. In the 3D culture DOC model to mimic TME, the complex treatment had non-toxic effects on S2 cells, but induce significant cytotoxicity in invasive cells. Also, in 3D model, the cells were able to produce breast ductal architecture. Treatment also abolished tumor phenotype of invasive cells downregulation of markers such as EGFR, P50, NFκB and β1-integrin was observed. | e trans-[Ru(PPh3) 2(N,Ndimethyl-Nthiophenylt hioureatok2O, S)(bipy)]PF6 complex | Becceneri et al 2020 [ |
| 3D culture model to test RADARADARADARADACONH2 (RADA16) | In vitro, Effect of RADA on CD44+/ CD24-cells derived from breast cancer cell line | CD44+/CD24-sub population selected after sub-culturing MDA-MB-435S | MDA-MB-435S was enriched in CD44+/CD24-phenotype expressing cells. As compared with matrigel and collagen I, cells cultured in 3D RADA16 nano-fiber scaffold showed reversion of tumor phenotype, and formed round colonies and well-organized centric nucleus with regular morphology of the cells. | Cancer cells tested by culturing in 3D model either in RADA16 nanofiber scaffold versus Matrigel collagen I | Mi et al 2015 [ |
| 3D model using Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm extracellular matrix extract (EHS) matrigel and rat-tail collagen | In vitro, Cells embedded in the EHS Matrix as single cells allowed to grow for 10–121 days | Human breast epithelial cell line (S1), and invasive (T4–2 cell line) | Blocking of the β1-integrin using anti- β1-integrin MAB (clone AIIB2), T4–2 cells resistant to the antibody, but developed morphology very much alike S1 cells. | anti- β1-integrin MAB | Weaver et al 1997 [ |
| 3D laminin-rich basement membrane (3DlrBM) model for studying human breast cancer | In vitro | Breast (MDA-MD-231), and cervical cancer cell line (HeLa) | The retroviral expression transferred to re-establish HoxD10 expression in the malignant breast tumor cells. A phenotypic reversion after decrease in the expression levels of α3 integrin was observed along with decelerated cellular proliferation. | Retroviral gene transfer to restore HoxD10 expression | Carrio et al 2005 [ |
| 3D culture system for studying human breast cancer | In vitro | Epithelial cell line (HMT-3522), and breast cancer cell line (T4–2) | Downregulation of EGFR and β1-integrin observed in breast tumors and normal cell line upon treatment with an antibody against β1-integrin function-blocking mAb. This further led to growth arrest and tumor phenotype changes, looking more like normal breast cell morphology. | β1-integrin function blocking mAb | Wang et al 1998 [ |
| Biodegradable meshwork (Hyalograft 3D): primary breast cancer cells cultured in 3D collagen-I gels both as mono- and as co-culture with human mammary fibroblasts (HMFs). | In vitro | PBCs and HMFs were used in the ratio of 1:2. Primary breast carcinoma cells | In a total of 38% of the cases, reverted tumor phenotype was observed. Presence of acini formation was observed as a conversion characteristic into the normal phenotype, which was reported to be 2–7 fold, and glandular structures were observed in reverted co-cultured cells. In the isolated primary breast carcinoma cells; out-of 13, only 5 exhibited reversion of their malignant phenotype. Also, differentially expressed genes were identified such as ELF5, MAL, SQLE, MAP6, and ZMYND11. | PBC cultured alone or with HMFs for comparative analysis | Romer et al 2013 [ |
| 3D basement membrane culture model | In vitro | Mammary epithelial cells (MCF-10A cell lines) | RNAi mediated inhibition of Bim expression blocks the luminal apoptosis and slow down the formation of lumen. | RNAi to block Bim expression | Reginato et al 2005 [ |
| Human breast 3D tissue morphogenesis models | In vitro | Human breast cancer MCF7 cells | MCF7 cells were co-cultured with primary human breast fibroblasts. The presence of normal breast fibroblasts constitutes the minimal permissive microenvironment to induce near-complete tumor phenotypic reversion. | Cells alone or cocultured with primary human breast fibroblast cells | Krause et al 2010 [ |
| 3DlrECM | In vitro | Breast cancer cell line T4–2 | Small molecule inhibitor of TACE, TAPI-2, reverted the malignant phenotype of T4–2 cells into phenotypically normal mammary acinus like architectures. The TACE-dependent shedding of amphiregulin and TGF-α was also observed in several additional breast cancer cell lines. | Small molecule inhibitor of TACE, TAPI-2 | Kenny et al 2007 [ |
| Kirsten sarcoma virustransformed NIH/3T3 cell line model | In vitro | NIH/3T3, DT (Ki/HGPRT- NIH/3T3), Ki/TK- NIH | Flat revertants with in vivo reduced tumorigenicity isolated from populations of 3 T3 cells transfected with a cDNA expression library derived from normal human fibroblasts. | Kirsten sarcoma virus | Noda et al 1989, [ |
| Lysosomal-type sialidase b16 melanoma cells Murine model | In vitro | B16-BL6 murine melanoma cells | Lysosomal sialidase overexpression inhibits the metastatic potential of B16 melanoma, at least partially through reduction of cell growth and sensitization to apoptosis. This shows sialidase is involved in cellular functions, which are affecting malignancy characteristics of cancer cells. | Lysosomal-type sialidase | Kato et al 2001, [ |
| GM3-mediated cell line model | In vitro | KK47 (noninvasive & nonmetastatic) and YTS1 (highly invasive and metastatic) | Ganglioside GM3 expression was higher in KK47 than in YTS1 cells. GM3 shows multiple functions like Integrin α3 with CD9 have more vital interaction. RNAi was used to knockdown CD9 that gives high cell motility. An addition of GM3 exogenously induces reversion of high motility YTS1 to low motility phenotype. An increased level of GM3 suppresses the motility as well as invasiveness of the tumor cells. | Gangliosid es GM3 | Mitsuzuka et al 2005, [ |
| Viral oncoprotein Jun (v-Jun) Fibroblast cell line model | In vitro | Mouse fibroblast cell line C3H 10 T1/2 & the chicken fibroblast cell line DF1 | Upregulation of GM3 synthase occurs upon GM3 transfection in v-Jun-transformed 10 T1/2 cells, and this reverts the oncogenic phenotype into normal as indicated by anchorage-independent growth. | Sialosyllac tosylcera mide | Miura et al 2004, [ |
| Human breast epithelial cells | In vitro | MCF10A Treated with or without PD032590 (MEK inhibitor) | MCF10A treatment with MEKi showed phenotypic reversion as well as downregulation of different molecules involved in membrane transport, metabolism, cell adhesion, & downregulation of biological processes crucial for tumor-related phenotypes including cellular proliferation & metastasis | MEK Inhibitior | Leung et al 2020, [ |