Literature DB >> 34007319

Autophagy-related signaling pathways are involved in cancer (Review).

Caixia Chen1, Hui Gao2, Xiulan Su1.   

Abstract

Autophagy is a self-digestion process in cells that can maintain energy homeostasis under normal circumstances. However, misfolded proteins, damaged mitochondria and other unwanted components in cells can be decomposed and reused via autophagy in some specific cases (including hypoxic stress, low energy states or nutrient deprivation). Therefore, autophagy serves a positive role in cell survival and growth. However, excessive autophagy may lead to apoptosis. Furthermore, abnormal autophagy may lead to carcinogenesis and promote tumorigenesis in normal cells. In tumor cells, autophagy may provide the energy required for excessive proliferation, promote the growth of cancer cells, and evade apoptosis caused by certain treatments, including radiotherapy and chemotherapy, resulting in increased treatment resistance and drug resistance. On the other hand, autophagy leads to an insufficient nutrient supply in cancer cells and the destruction of energy homeostasis, thereby inducing cancer cell apoptosis. Therefore, understanding the mechanism of the double-edged sword of autophagy is crucial for the treatment of cancer. The present review summarizes the signaling pathways and key factors involved in autophagy and cancer to provide possible strategies for treating tumors. Copyright: © Chen et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  autophagy; cancer; key factors; signal pathway

Year:  2021        PMID: 34007319      PMCID: PMC8120650          DOI: 10.3892/etm.2021.10142

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Ther Med        ISSN: 1792-0981            Impact factor:   2.447


1. Introduction

In the 1960s, researchers first observed that cells degraded intracellular components by wrapping them in a membrane to form a cystic structure and transporting the contents to a small compartment (called the lysosomes) for recycling (1). Due to the difficulties in studying this phenomenon, little was known about it until the early 1990s, when the Japanese molecular cell biologist Ryoshi Ohsumi performed a series of experiments. In the experiments, baker’s yeast was used to identify key autophagy genes. The mechanism behind yeast autophagy was further explained and it was demonstrated that human cells use a similar mechanism, a tightly regulated cellular process in which damaged proteins or organelles are wrapped in autophagic vesicles with a bilayer membrane structure, which are transported to lysosomes (mammals) or vacuoles (yeast and plants) for degradation and recycling (2,3). By contrast, autophagy occurs under normal conditions in response to adverse stresses, including hypoxia and nutritional deficiency to supply nutrients and energy and maintain cellular homeostasis. Autophagy can also act as a collective scavenger to degrade unwanted substances (including damaged organelles and misfolded proteins). However, when excessive, autophagy can also lead to autophagic programmed cell death, which leads to the occurrence of several diseases (including neurodegenerative diseases, pathogenic microbial infections and cancer) (4-6). Cancer is a disease with serious metabolic disorders, and autophagy serves dual roles in promoting and inhibiting the occurrence and development of cancer. In addition, numerous signaling pathways and factors are involved in cancer-related processes (7). Beclin1 is a major factor in autophagy, but its expression is downregulated or absent in human ovarian cancer and non-small cell lung cancer, suggesting that Beclin1 is a tumor suppressor (8,9). Notably, Beclin1 is upregulated in colon cancer (10). In addition, numerous tumor suppressor factors (P53, PTEN, AMPK and LKB1) may negatively regulate the mTOR pathway and activate autophagy (11-14). By contrast, oncogenes, including Akt and ERK, can activate the mTOR signaling pathway to inhibit autophagy (15,16). Therefore, these factors or their pathways are bridges between autophagy and cancer. However, it is unclear whether tumor suppressors promote or inhibit autophagy. It is necessary to determine the advantages and disadvantages of autophagy is cancer, as well as the roles served by autophagy-associated factors and pathways in cancer in order to improve cancer diagnosis, treatment and prognosis assessment. By reviewing the signaling pathways and factors related to autophagy and cancer, the present review aimed to further clarify the association between autophagy and cancer and its mechanism to provide strategies for the prevention and treatment of cancer.

2. Initiation and classification of autophagy

Autophagy is derived from the Greek prefix Auto and is an intracellular catabolic process. At present, it has been demonstrated that there are three types of autophagy, microautophagy, chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) and macroautophagy (MAC) (17). Microautophagy is generally an invagination of lysosomal and nuclear membranes, which directly engulf cytoplasmic contents (Fig. 1). CMA selectively degrades proteins containing soluble KFERQ-like motifs. These motifs are recognized by 70-kD heat shock protein (Hsc70) and form complexes with Hsc70 and chaperones proteins; these complexes are then delivered to lysosomes through interactions with lysosome-associated membrane protein (LAMP2A) receptors, resulting in degradation (Fig. 1). MAC, commonly known as autophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy), occurs through a free bilayer membrane structure derived from the rough endoplasmic reticulum that wraps unwanted organelles/proteins or cytosol to form a structure called an autophagosome, which recognizes and isolates cellular contents that have been labeled by autophagy receptors. Autophagic lysosomes are then fused with lysosomes (mammals) or vacuoles (fungi or plants). During this process, those engulfed organelles/proteins or other components are degraded into amino acids or other raw materials for cell survival or the maintenance of cell nutrition, thereby allowing cells to maintain normal functions under various adverse conditions (2,3) (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Classification and initiation of autophagy. Autophagy is classified as macroautophagy, chaperone-mediated autophagy and microautophagy. The engulfed organelles/proteins or other components are degraded into amino acids or other raw materials that can be used for cell survival or to maintain the nutritional state of the cell, allowing the cell to survive under various adverse conditions.

Autophagy includes five stages: autophagy induction, nucleation, autophagosome extension, autophagosome maturation and autophagosome lysis (Fig. 2) (18).
Figure 2

The initiation and occurrence of autophagy. Autophagy includes the following stages: autophagy induction, nucleation, autophagosome extension, autophagosome maturation and autophagosome lysis. (1) The ULK1-Atg13-FIP200-Atg101 complex is involved in the induction of autophagy. (2) Formation of the Beclin1 (Atg6)-Atg14L-VPS15-VPS34 (PI3K) complex and the recruitment of Atgs. (3) Modification of the Atg5-Atg12 and LC3 systems. (4) SNARE and the Vps34-Vps15-Beclin1-UVRAG complex participate in the maturation of autophagosomes. (5) Acid hydrolases in autophagic lysosomes degrade the contents of vesicles.

Induction stage: The ULK1-Atg13-FIP200-Atg101 complex is involved in the induction of autophagy (19). Under conditions of sufficient nutrition, mammalian rapamycin target protein complex 1 has a certain activity and can phosphorylate unc-51 like kinase 1 (ULK1) and Atg13 to prevent ULK1 binding to Atg13, FIP200 (FAK-family interacting protein 200 kDa) and Atg101, thereby inhibiting autophagy. During nutritional deficiency, the activity of mTORC1 on the surface of the lysosome is inhibited, and ULK1 and Atg13 are dephosphorylated, which leads to the activation of ULK1 kinase, and the ULK complex localizes to phagosomes to form the ULK1-Atg13-FIP200-Atg101 complex, which induces autophagy. When mTORC1 activity is inhibited, Atg13-Atg1-Atg17 forms and initiates autophagy. Nucleation stage: The Beclin1 (Atg6)-Atg14L-VPS15-VPS34 (PI3K) complex mediates the formation of pre-autophagosomes (PASs) and the initiation of autophagy, and may also recruit associated autophagy proteins (including Atg12-Atg5, Atg6 and LC3). Atg6 and LC3 may promote the expansion and extension of phagosomes (20). Autophagosome extension: This step is mainly mediated by two ubiquitin-like systems, the Atg5-Atg12 system and the LC3 system (21). Atg7 acts as an E1-like ubiquitin-activating enzyme to activate Atg12; the E2 ubiquitin-transferase Atg10 transfers Atg12 to Atg5 to form an Atg12-Atg5 complex, which then binds with Atg16L to form an E3-like ligase-like Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L complex, which is located on the outer membrane of autophagosomes and participates in membrane expansion (22). At the same time, Atg4 can cleave the C-terminal glycine of proAtg8 (pro-LC3) to form cytoplasmic LC3-I and covalently bind to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) in response to Atg7 and Atg3 to form an Atg8-PE (LC3-II) fat-soluble complex (22). In addition, the Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L complex can activate the Atg3 enzyme, promote the transfer of Atg8 (LC3) from Atg3 to PE, and promote the formation of the Atg8-PE (LC3-II) complex. These two systems complement each other to promote the expansion and extension of the autophagic membrane (23). Autophagosome maturation: Soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) serves an important role in cell material transport and specific membrane fusion (24). The PI3K complex (Vps34-Vps15-Beclin1) binds to the anti-ultraviolet gene (ultraviolet radiation resistance-associated gene, UVRAG) to form a Vps34-Vps15-Beclin1-UVRAG complex (class III phosphatidylinositol kinase complex, PI3KC3), which participates in autophagic maturation and transport. Cheng et al (25) reported that Pacer (protein associated with UVRAG as an autophagy enhancer) is a vertebrate-specific autophagy regulatory molecule. Pacer may directly interact with UVRAG, one of the mammalian PIK3C3 subunits, thereby alleviating Rubicon (complex subunit, autophagy negative regulatory factor)-mediated inhibition of Vps34 kinase. By contrast, Pacer may recruit PI3KC3 and HOPS complex subunits to autophagic vesicles and promote the fusion of autophagosomes and lysosomes. In addition, autophagic lysosome fusion requires the participation of lysosome-associated membrane protein 1 (LAMP1) and lysosome-associated membrane protein 2 (LAMP2) (26). Autophagolysis: Acid hydrolase in autophagic lysosomes degrades the contents of the vesicles.

3. Signaling pathways in autophagy and tumors

Basal autophagy serves an important role in cellular homeostasis by eliminating old or damaged organelles and aggregated intracellular proteins. In the cancer microenvironment, when cancer cells are subjected to stress (glucose/cytokine deficiency, hypoxia, oxidative stress, radiation or anticancer drug therapy), the level of autophagy increases, which leads to the enhancement of cancer cell adaptability (cytoprotective response) and contributes toward the development, proliferation and migration of cancer cells (27). In addition, it has been reported that the level of autophagy was decreased in a variety of cancer types, indicating that autophagy also has a certain anticancer effect (28). Therefore, autophagy serves dual roles in the promotion and inhibition of cancer. The occurrence and development of tumors involves numerous signaling pathways and associated factors. Therefore, a more comprehensive review of autophagy and tumor-related signaling pathways is required to understand the pathogenesis and treatment of cancer.

The mTOR/PI3K/AKT signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer

mTOR, a highly evolutionarily conserved kinase, is important for cell proliferation, growth and metabolism (29). Early studies have demonstrated that rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor, may induce autophagy (30). A previous study reported that the mTOR signal transduction pathway is associated with autophagy regulation (31). There are two types of mTOR complexes, rapamycin-sensitive mTORC1 and rapamycin-insensitive mTORC2 (32,33). Rapamycin-sensitive mTORC1 is composed of mTOR, mLST8, Raptor, PRAS40, DEPTOR, RadA-D and Rheb-GP and mTORC2 is composed of mTOR, mLST8, Rictor and related proteins (Sin1 and Protor, DEPTOR; Fig. 3) (34). mTOR regulates autophagy through two mechanisms. mTORC1 acts on 4E-BP1 (eIF-4E-binding protein 1) and S6K1 through the signal transduction pathway and may initiate transcription and translation of associated genes and regulate autophagy (35). mTOR kinase may also directly act on Atg and regulate autophagy (36). 4E-BP1 is a negative regulator of translation and may be phosphorylated and inactivated by mTORC1. The inactivated 4E-BP1 dissociates from eIF-4E, thereby activating eIF-4E. EIF-4E binds with eIF-4A and eIF-4G to form an eIF-4F complex. The EIF-4F complex binds to the cap structure at the 5' end of target mRNA, which promotes the initiation of translation. EIF-4E may regulate the translation of numerous proteins, including cyclin D-MYC and RAS, which are closely associated with cancer cell growth, proliferation and cell cycle regulation, thereby affecting cancer progression (37,38). S6K1 is a serine/threonine kinase with multiple phosphorylation sites that is directly or indirectly regulated by mTORC1 and participates in the regulation of autophagy (30). S6K1 may phosphorylate and activate 40S ribosomal protein S6. Activated S6 may improve the translation efficiency of 5' terminal oligopyrimidine bundle (TOPS) RNA. 5'Top mRNA accounts for 15-20% of total intracellular RNA and encodes numerous components required for protein translation, including ribosomal proteins, elongation factors and polyA-binding proteins. A previous study demonstrated that abnormal synthesis of these proteins is associated with cancer (39). Members of the AGC protein kinase family, including Akt, SGK1 and PKC, are known substrates of mTORC2 and serve important roles in regulating cytoskeletal remodeling and autophagy (40). The expression of the tumor suppressor FOXO3a is usually downregulated in cancer (41). Activated FOXO3 may induce autophagy by enhancing the transcription of autophagy-related genes LC3 and BNIP3, while mTORC2 blocks the activation of FOXO3 by activating Akt (42). Therefore, FOXO3a is a key molecule connecting autophagy and cancer, and its expression may be regulated by regulating autophagy-related signaling pathways, suggesting that FOXO3a may be a target for the treatment of cancer.
Figure 3

The mTOR/PI3K/Akt signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer. mTOR generally forms two complexes: mTORC1 consists of central proteins (mTOR, mLST8 and Raptor) and associated proteins (PRAS40, DEPTOR, RadA-D and Rheb-GP), and mTORC2 consists of central proteins (mTOR, mLST8 and Rictor) and related proteins (Sin1 and Protor and DEPTOR). mTOR regulates autophagy through two mechanisms. mTORC1 acts on and S6K1 through signal transduction pathways and initiates the transcription and translation of related genes, thereby regulating autophagy. mTOR kinase may also directly affect Atg to regulate autophagy. 4E-BP1, eIF-4E-binding protein 1.

When a growth factor or a Toll-like ligand binds to a growth factor receptor or a Toll-like receptor, p85 is activated, and p110 is recruited, thereby activating PI3K and then catalyzing PIP2 phosphorylation on the plasma membrane to produce the second messenger PIP3, recruiting Akt (43). PTEN is a phosphatase that inhibits the transition of PIP2 to PIP3, thereby preventing PIP3 from recruiting Akt to the membrane, inhibiting Akt activation by preventing phosphorylation (44). PDK1 is a kinase. When Akt is recruited to the membrane, PDK1 phosphorylates Akt at threonine 308 (T308), and mTORC2 and other kinases phosphorylate Akt at serine 473 (S473). When these two sites are phosphorylated, Akt is fully activated, and PRAS40 is phosphorylated, thereby alleviating PRAS40-mediated inhibition of mTORC1(45). Following mTORC1 activation, some of the aforementioned regulatory responses take place. In addition, the TSC2 and TSC1 complexes, which are encoded by the Tsc1 and Tsc2 genes, respectively, may inactivate Rheb, inhibiting the activity of mTORC1, and thereby promoting autophagy (46). Activated Akt may phosphorylate TSC2 and prevent the formation of the TSC complex, which further leads to the activation of mTORC1, thereby inhibiting autophagy (47). It has been demonstrated that the mTOR/PI3K/Akt signaling pathway is triggered in tumor cells and is considered to be a key therapeutic target for the treatment of various cancer types (48). Han et al (49) demonstrated that β-rapazone may block the mTOR/PI3K/Akt signaling pathway, induce autophagy, and ultimately inhibit the migration and invasion of nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells. In addition, angiogenesis may provide nutrition and oxygen to tissues, which are essential for tumor growth and metastasis. It has been demonstrated that dihydroartemisinin (DHA) may induce autophagy in human umbilical vein endothelial cells by inhibiting the Akt/mTOR signaling pathway (50). It has been reported that angiogenesis is a major cause of cancer, and DHA is an effective antiangiogenic agent (51). Recent studies have demonstrated that angiogenesis is closely associated with autophagy (52). Antitumor therapy by inhibiting angiogenesis is also a promising strategy. In numerous cancer types, protective autophagy induces chemical resistance to various chemotherapeutic agents. Therefore, the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents in numerous cancer types is limited by spontaneous protective autophagic induction, and chemical resistance may be overcome by studying autophagy pathways and properly regulating autophagy levels. Liu et al (53) reported that the combination of 9za with autophagy inhibitors (including chloroquine or 3-methyladenine) exhibited higher cytotoxicity and apoptosis than 9za alone and reported that the Akt/mTOR axis was associated with 9za-induced autophagy (53). In addition, PDK1 overexpression leads to increased phosphorylation of PDK1 and Akt, and blockade of 9za-mediated autophagy (53). The regulation of autophagy contributes toward the expression of tumor suppressor proteins or oncogenes. Tumor suppressors are negatively regulated by mTOR, leading to autophagy induction and cancer initiation inhibition. By contrast, oncogenes may be activated by mTOR, class I PI3K and Akt, leading to autophagy inhibition and cancer development. The induction of autophagy has a positive regulatory effect on cancer chemotherapy resistance; therefore, reducing chemotherapy resistance by inhibiting autophagy is one of the strategies that may be considered in cancer treatment. Furthermore, studies have reported that abnormal PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling is associated with cancer cell growth, survival, movement and resistance to targeted therapy (54-56). It was demonstrated that in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, the mutation rate of the mTOR genome reached 80-90% (57). In addition, previous studies have reported that in gastric cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer, endometrial cancer, cholangiocarcinoma and bladder cancer, inhibiting the mTOR signaling pathway may inhibit cancer progression or has a synergistic effect with current conventional treatments (including radiotherapy and chemotherapy), enhancing sensitization and efficacy (58-63). mTOR is a key factor in this pathway. A previous study has demonstrated that there is inevitable resistance to first- and second-generation mTOR inhibitors, which may be associated with drug-resistant mutants and the induction of autophagy (64). However, the third-generation mTOR inhibitor, Rapalink, (which inhibits both sites of mTOR at the same time) may enter cancer cells, inactivate mTOR signaling, and decrease resistance to first- or second-generation mTOR inhibitors (64). Akt inhibitor VIII (AKTi-1/2) may reversibly inhibit Akt, and when combined with other inhibitors, it synergistically enhances the anticancer effect (65). Therefore, the majority of studies have focused on PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway inhibitors. Unfortunately, the majority of mTOR signaling pathway inhibitors are in clinical trials, and numerous challenges need to be overcome if these treatments are to be used clinically. A previous study reported that, in patients with HER2-positive cancer, inhibiting the mTOR pathway alone may activate autophagy, causing cancer cells to escape and develop drug resistance (66). Therefore, it is necessary to investigate the inhibition of other signal transduction pathways, dual pathway inhibition or multiple pathway inhibition to achieve the inhibition of cancer progression. To date, no typical biomarkers have been identified to predict the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway inhibitory responses or drug resistance. Therefore, targeting the PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway in cancer treatment requires comprehensive investigation.

The AMPK signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer

As a cellular energy receptor, AMPK serves a key role, not only in the regulation of cellular energy homeostasis, but also in carcinogenesis and anticancer drug resistance (67). AMPK may form a heterotrimeric complex containing a catalytic α-subunit and regulatory β-and γ-subunits. Following binding to the γ-subunit, AMP allosterically activates the complex, resulting in substrate phosphorylation at threonine 172 and further phosphorylation by upstream LKB1 in the activation ring of the α-subunit (Fig. 4) (68). When cells are stimulated, extracellular signaling molecules first bind to the receptor to form a complex and then activate the Gs protein on the cell membrane. The activated Gs protein reactivates adenylate cyclase (AC) on the cell membrane to catalyze the removal of pyrophosphate from ATP to produce cAMP. The decreased cellular energy state enhances the phosphorylation and activation of AMPK by LKB1, and following activation, AMPK catalyzes the phosphorylation of ULK1, which induces autophagy (69). Induced autophagy removes the accumulated unwanted components that cause inflammation, stimulate ROS, trigger cell death and induce genomic instability, all of which contribute toward cancer. Therefore, AMPK-induced autophagy may prevent the occurrence and development of tumors. In addition, induced autophagy may also provide nutrients for tumor cells and aid tumors in adapting to adverse environments. It has been demonstrated that in breast cancer cells, parthenolide activates the apoptosis pathway and AMPK-autophagy survival pathway through the production of ROS. Inhibition of AMPK or autophagy may potentially enhance the anticancer effect of parthenolide on breast cancer cells (70). In addition, AMPK can also act on the downstream factors TSC2, p53 and p27kip1(71). LKB1 is the upstream tumor suppressor of AMPK, and TSC2, p53 and p27kip1 are downstream tumor suppressor genes, indicating that AMPK has a certain role in tumor inhibition.
Figure 4

AMPK signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer. AMPK may form a heterotrimeric complex that contains a catalytic α-subunit and regulatory β- and γ-subunits. Following AMP binding to the γ-subunit, the allosteric activation complex is phosphorylated at threonine 172 and is phosphorylated by upstream LKB1 at the activation loop of the alpha subunit, which induces autophagy. AMPK can also act on the downstream factors, TSC2, p53 and p27kip1, and mediate cancer formation and development.

Notably, AMPK is a key factor in the response to metabolic stress and the maintenance of energy homeostasis. As AMPK is able to support the proliferation of cancer cells by regulating energy metabolism, the AMPK pathway has attracted much attention in the treatment of cancer. In thyroid cancer, the AMPK pathway is highly activated (72). It was demonstrated that inhibiting the AMPK pathway may inhibit cancer. JQ1 may induce autophagy by activating the LKB1/AMPK pathway, thereby inhibiting cancer cell proliferation (73). In addition, NPC-26 kills human colorectal cancer cells by activating AMPK signaling (74). Therefore, AMPK and its pathways are expected to serve as therapeutic targets for the treatment of a variety of cancer types. In summary, the role of the AMPK pathway in autophagy and cancer is complicated, but AMPK pathway inhibition is more conducive to cancer suppression than activation.

The MAPK signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer

MAPK is a serine/threonine protein kinase that primarily includes three subgroups: ERK, JNK/SAPKII and p38-MAPK (Fig. 5). MAPK may regulate the expression of downstream genes by regulating B lymphocyte tumor-2 gene (Bcl-2) family proteins. Bcl-2 family proteins are key regulators in the disposal of abnormal cells and participate in almost all cell pathological and physiological processes, including cell cycle regulation, cell survival and death, gene expression, and cell movement (75). JNK regulates autophagy through Beclin-dependent and -independent signaling (76). ER stress upregulates p62 expression through the PERK-mediated eIF2 α-ATF4 pathway and activates the ER transmembrane sensor. Inositol requires enzyme 1 (IRE1) to activate Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), and JNK activation may inhibit/phosphorylate the antiapoptotic protein Bcl2, which leads to the dissociation of Bcl2 from Beclin-1, resulting in autophagic flux. Pan et al (77) found that Prodigiosin-induced endoplasmic reticulum stress could lead to breast cancer cell death through the PERK-mediated eIF2 α-ATF4 pathway, in which IRE1-JNK mediates Bcl2-induced cell death. However, JNK mediates the increase in Bcl2 and protective autophagy, resulting in increased autophagic flux and the induction of therapeutic resistance. Therefore, the therapeutic agent Prodigiosin, could be used in combination with autophagy inhibitors to inhibit associated autophagic flux, which may improve treatment efficacy. P62 is a ubiquitin-binding protein that is closely associated with the ubiquitination of proteins. P62 is involved in the regulation of a variety of cellular signal transduction pathways and autophagy (78). In autophagy, p62 binds to ubiquitin, forms a complex with LC3-II located on the autophagic membrane, and is degraded in the autophagic lysosome. Therefore, when autophagy occurs, p62 protein is continuously degraded in the cytoplasm; when autophagic activity is weakened and autophagy is deficient, p62 protein will accumulate in the cytoplasm. P62 is one of the marker proteins that reflects autophagic activity. The P62 level indirectly reflects the level of autophagosome clearance. A large number of studies have demonstrated that high expression of p62 is associated with poor prognosis in colon cancer, non-small cell lung cancer and breast cancer (79-81). Therefore, p62 may be an important target for the treatment of these cancer types. By contrast, JNK may upregulate the expression of Atg and promote autophagy. Chen et al demonstrated that tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) promoted autophagy in A549 cells by regulating the expression of ATG through the JNK pathway (82). Autophagy inhibition may inhibit proliferation and enhance apoptosis in A549 cells induced by TRAIL (82). A previous study have demonstrated that JNK has a significant oncolytic effect, and autophagy inducers acting on the JNK/Beclin-1 axis may enhance this oncolytic effect (83). Notably, JNK is a potential molecular target for tumor therapy. When cells are stimulated by growth factors, mitogens and environmental stimuli, they activate the ERK pathway through the Ras-Raf-MEK1/2-ERK cascade and act on nuclear transcription factors, including AP-1 and NF-κB to regulate gene expression (84). In addition, the activation of ERK may promote the expression of LC3 and p62, promote autophagy, and downregulate the expression of LAMP1 and LAMP2, thereby inhibiting the binding of lysosomes to autophagosomes and inhibiting the degradation of autophagosomes (85). Mou et al (86) reported that Berbamine exhibited anticancer effects on human HT-29 colon cancer cells by inhibiting the MEK/ERK pathway and cell migration, and inducing autophagy and apoptosis. Therefore, MEK/ERK is expected to be a therapeutic target for colon cancer.
Figure 5

MAPK signaling pathway in autophagy and cancer. The MAPK signaling pathway mainly includes three subfamilies: ERK, JNK/SAPKII and p38-MAPK. JNK may regulate autophagy through Beclin-dependent and -independent signaling. When cells are stimulated by signals from growth factors, mitogens and stimuli, the ERK pathway is activated by the Ras-Raf-MEK1/2-ERK cascade. Extracellular stimulation (including inflammatory factors, endotoxin, osmotic pressure, chemotherapy and ultraviolet) or intracellular stimulation (including oxidative stress and heavy metals) activates MAPK p38 through the TAK1-MKK6-p38 and ASKK1-MKK3-p38 cascades, respectively.

Oxidative stress is one of the causes of autophagy. In vivo ROS accumulation not only activates autophagy, but also the Keap1-Nrf2 oxidative stress signaling pathway (87). P62 not only functions as one of the key factors in autophagy, but also regulates Nrf2 and NF-κB, which induce p62 gene transcription, and endoplasmic reticulum stress may induce p62 mRNA expression. The accumulation of p62 may lead to the activation of NF-κB, and NF-κB may induce the expression of VEGF and promote angiogenesis, thereby promoting the occurrence of cancer (88). In addition, NF-κB may promote tumor growth by regulating the expression of COX2 and other genes (89). When autophagy is disturbed, p62 competitively binds with Keap1 to block the Keap1-Nrf2 pathway and increase Nrf2 signal transduction. P62 is the transcriptional target of Nrf2. Under oxidative stress conditions, Nrf2 induces increased p62 to reactivate Nrf2. At the same time, the increase in p62 promotes autophagy (87). ABRUS lectin (AGG) is a heterotetramer type II ribosome-inactivating protein isolated from Abrus precatorius seeds. AGG induces autophagy in the human tongue phosphorous cancer CAL33 cell line through ROS and regulates NRF2 through p62(90). Therefore, AGG induces NRF2 degradation via autophagy and leads to ROS accumulation-dependent apoptosis, which may be used in the treatment of oral cancer. The binding of Keap1 and Nrf2 causes abnormal activation of Nrf2 in cancer cells. Unregulated Nrf2 may make cancer cells highly tolerant to anticancer drugs and ROS and stimulate metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells. Metabolic reprogramming is one of the main signs of cancer. Autophagy and oxidative stress disorders may lead to the accumulation of unfavorable oxidation products in cells, which may lead to cancer. Therefore, ensuring the balance between autophagy and oxidative stress is one of the strategies for the prevention and treatment of cancer. Tyrosine 180 and threonine 182 of p38 MAPK are located in the Ⅷ domain. The activation of MAPK p38 requires dual phosphorylation of tyrosine and threonine. External stimulation (including inflammatory cytokines, endotoxin, osmotic pressure, chemotherapy and ultraviolet radiation) or intracellular stimulation (including oxidative stress and heavy metals) activate MAPK p38 through the TAK1-MKK6-p38 and ASKK1-MKK3-p38 cascades, respectively. Phosphorylation of Atg5 inhibits autophagic membrane extension and the transformation of LCI to LCII, thereby inhibiting the occurrence of autophagy (91,92). By contrast, Atg5 phosphorylation regulates downstream MSK and RSK protein kinases, thereby regulating transcription and translation (93). In addition, certain tumor-related proteins/factors, including p53 Magi, Myc and CHOP, are downstream of MAPK p38 (91,94). Therefore, MAPK p38 is a candidate tumor treatment target. Autophagy exhibits dual effects on cells, not only protecting cells, but also leading to cell death. The production of tumor-associated ROS may be stimulated by endogenous and exogenous factors. Endogenous factors generally include mitochondrial products and nutrient deficiency, and exogenous factors include chemotherapy and radiotherapy. ROS have been suggested to induce or mediate the activation of MAPK family members and serve important roles in autophagy and apoptosis (95). It is known that there is a series of complex signal transduction pathways and interactions between ROS and autophagy that regulate autophagy. In response to cellular stress, there are checks and balances between the two responses; ROS may participate in the induction of autophagy, and conversely, autophagy may control the level of ROS (96). In addition, ROS-mediated autophagy activation mainly serves a cytoprotective role in starvation conditions. However, in certain cases, ROS may induce cell damage and participate in certain signal transduction pathways, leading to autophagic death. JNK activation is involved in the apoptosis- and autophagy-mediated responses to various stress signals (97). JNK may mediate the phosphorylation of the antiapoptotic protein, Bcl-2/Bcl-xL, to change the MMP. In this respect, the mitochondrial dysfunction induced by lutein VI may be associated with the JNK-mediated apoptotic response. JNK activation also contributes toward autophagy induction. Lutein VI induces G2/M arrest, apoptosis and autophagy in human osteosarcoma cells by activating the ROS/JNK pathway (98). Chitooligosaccharide (COS) exerts significant antitumor activity on human cervical cancer C33A cells by activating oxidative stress and mitochondrial apoptosis and autophagy signal transduction. Ubenimex may inhibit the proliferation of pituitary adenoma GH3 and MMQ cells, and induce apoptosis and autophagy, which may be associated with the activation of the ROS/ERK1/2 pathway (99). These findings provide novel perspectives for the possible application of Ubenimex in the chemotherapeutic treatment of pituitary adenomas. In addition, autophagy is associated with cancer treatment resistance. It has been reported that breast cancer MCF-7 cells are resistant to tamoxifen through autophagy induced by p38/c-JNK (100). A previous study reported that ECZ induces apoptosis in mouse colon cancer CT-26 cells through a caspase-dependent pathway and triggers autophagy by increasing the formation of autophagosomes, and the production of ROS serves a key role in this process (101). Inhibition of autophagy enhances ECZ-induced apoptosis, which is due to increased ROS production, suggesting that autophagy may serve a cytoprotective role by resisting apoptosis (101). Therefore, ECZ may be used in combination with autophagy inhibitors for the chemoprevention of cancer or as a chemotherapeutic agent. By examining ROS production, apoptosis and autophagy, it has been demonstrated that regulating the apoptosis-autophagy balance in cells treated with ultralong silver nanowires may protect A549 cells from ROS accumulation and nutrient deficiency ultralong nanowire stimulation (102). Therefore, autophagy serves a role in cytoprotection, which is also a factor leading to the therapeutic resistance of cancer cells. In general, ROS serves important roles in apoptosis and autophagy signal transduction, and the production of ROS selectively induces cancer cell death. Autophagic cell death leads to a significant decrease in the number of cancer cells, but as autophagic cell death generally occurs in normal cells rather than cancer cells, the inactivation of autophagic cell death remains an important cause of tumor formation.

4. Autophagy-associated antineoplastic agents

The basal level of autophagy suppresses tumorigenesis by decreasing damaged organelles and proteins and other unwanted components to maintain cellular homeostasis. However, autophagy disorders positively regulate the occurrence and development of tumors. Due to the association between autophagy and tumor occurrence and development, a series of autophagy regulators have been developed to treat tumors (Table I).
Table I

Autophagy-associated antineoplastic agents.

AgentTumor (cell) typeAction targetAutophagy activator (+)/inhibitor (-)Ref.
Everolimus tabletsHuman breast cancer cells (MCF-10DCIS)Inhibit mTOR+(103)
Venetoclax (ABT199)Mammary cancer cellsInhibit Bcl-2; induce autophagy by+(104)
AT-101, obatoclaxMCF7 cells, human acute T lymphoblastic leukemia cellsinterfering with the interaction between Beclin1 and Bcl-2+(105,106)
Rapamycin (AY 22989; sirolimus)Liver cancer HepG2 cellsInhibit mTOR+(107)
3-MASmall cell lung cancerInhibit the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway-(108)
LY294002Human glioblastoma cellsInhibit the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway-(109)
Bafilomycin A1Glioma cell linesSelectively inhibit H+-ATPase-(110)
AutophinibMCF7-LC3 cellsVPS34-(111)
ROC-325Renal cell carcinomaLC3B and p62-(112)
IITZ-01Lung, colon and breast cancer cellsEnhance autophagosome formation as indicated by increased expression of LC3-II-(113)
DaurisolineHeLa and MEF cellsDestroy lysosomes-(114)
3BDOLung cancer A549 cellsActivate mTOR kinase-(115)
9fBreast cancerBRD4-(94)
CQ, HCQHuman lung cancer cells, human glioblastoma cellsInhibit the fusion of autophagosomes and lysosomes-(110,116)
Spautin-1HepG2 cellsInhibit the deubiquitination activity of USP10 and USP13-(117)

3-MA, 3-methyladenine; CQ, chloroquinine; HCQ, hydroxychloroquine.

A number of autophagy regulators, including everolimus tablets, venezuela, AT-101, rapamycin, 3-MA, LY294002, bafilomycin A1, autophinib, ROC-325, IITZ-01, daurisoline, 3BDO, 9f, chloroquine (CQ), hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and spautin-1, are used to treat cancer (103-117). CQ and HCQ are lysosome inhibitors that inhibit autophagy and induce the accumulation of autophagosomes by altering lysosomal pH (110,117). Preclinical studies have demonstrated that CQ or HCQ may inhibit the growth of cancer cells by inhibiting autophagy in bladder cancer, pancreatic cancer, lung cancer and glioma (110,116,118). In addition, a number of studies have reported that these reagents enhance the therapeutic effects of radiotherapy and chemotherapy by inhibiting autophagy-mediated anticancer therapy (53,111,112). Therefore, the development of autophagy-specific inhibitors is a novel therapeutic strategy for anticancer therapy. Under cellular stress conditions, including nutrient deficiency or starvation, hypoxia, oxidative stress, pathogen infection, radiation or anticancer drug therapy, the level of autophagy increases, which enhances cell adaptability and viability and serves a role in cell protection. For solid tumors with low blood supply, autophagy provides energy for cancer cells, but this is not always the case. Autophagy also serves a different role in different types of cancer. AT-101 induces autophagy via Beclin1-dependent or Beclin1-independent pathways; induces survival-mediating protective autophagy in Burkitt lymphoma, breast cancer, cervical cancer and non-small cell lung cancer; and induced autophagic death in prostate cancer cells, malignant peripheral schwannomas and gliomas (105,106). In addition, different types of tumors have different autophagic activities. In ovarian cancer, lung cancer, brain glioma and esophageal cancer, the protein expression of Beclin1 and autophagic activity are decreased (119,120). However, in nasopharyngeal carcinoma, the prognosis of the group with high Beclin1 expression combined with radiotherapy was worse than that of the group with low Beclin1 expression. This effect may be due to the decrease in microvessel density in tumor tissue following radiotherapy, resulting in tissue hypoxia, thereby inducing autophagy and promoting tumor survival in a hypoxic environment. Therefore, the sensitivity of cancer cells to radiotherapy is decreased (121). Autophagy function was decreased and cell necrosis was increased, promoting tumor progression. Beclin1 deletion decreases autophagy, thereby promoting the occurrence and development of tumors. Tumor cells degrade unwanted substances through autophagy to generate nutrients and decrease energy consumption, which is conducive to tumor survival; high autophagic activity may confer a survival advantage in harsh environments but may weaken the effect of radiotherapy. Therefore, when developing tumor-associated autophagy inhibitors/activators, comprehensive consideration should be given to different types of tissues and different types of tumors. In numerous cancer types, protective autophagy induces resistance to various chemotherapeutic agents. Therefore, the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents in numerous cancer types is limited by spontaneous protective autophagy induction, and chemoresistance may be overcome by studying autophagic pathways and effectively regulating autophagy levels.

5. Conclusions

In conclusion, the signaling pathways and factors associated with autophagy and cancer are intertwined. Tumor suppressors may serve a dual role in autophagy. The occurrence of autophagy may promote cancer and inhibiting autophagy may inhibit cancer. The occurrence of autophagy may also inhibit cancer progression. Activation of autophagy may inhibit cancer, but at the same time, autophagy is a key factor in the development of drug resistance. Therefore, it is also necessary to prevent the development of drug resistance, including through the inhibition of multiple signal transduction pathways, to increase the inhibition of cancer and inhibit drug resistance. The mTOR/PI3K/Akt, AMPK and MAPK signaling pathways and their upstream and downstream factors all serve important roles in cancer and autophagy, and no reliable evidence has been collected for the reversal of these pathways. Therefore, reasonable analysis, evaluation and identification of cancer types, staging and the tumor microenvironment contribute toward the selection of therapeutic targets and prognostic markers.
  119 in total

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Journal:  Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol       Date:  2017 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.545

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Authors:  Elizabeth A Oczypok; Tim D Oury; Charleen T Chu
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3.  Autophagy is a regulator of TRAIL-induced apoptosis in NSCLC A549 cells.

Authors:  Yuqing Chen; Xin Zhou; Jianou Qiao; Aihua Bao
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Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 16.016

5.  BMP‑6 protects retinal pigment epithelial cells from oxidative stress‑induced injury by inhibiting the MAPK signaling pathways.

Authors:  Li Chen; Ming Liu; Yan Luan; Yingfei Liu; Zhichao Zhang; Bo Ma; Xuan Liu; Yong Liu
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8.  Combination of ERK and autophagy inhibition as a treatment approach for pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Kirsten L Bryant; Clint A Stalnecker; Daniel Zeitouni; Jennifer E Klomp; Sen Peng; Andrey P Tikunov; Venugopal Gunda; Mariaelena Pierobon; Andrew M Waters; Samuel D George; Garima Tomar; Björn Papke; G Aaron Hobbs; Liang Yan; Tikvah K Hayes; J Nathaniel Diehl; Gennifer D Goode; Nina V Chaika; Yingxue Wang; Guo-Fang Zhang; Agnieszka K Witkiewicz; Erik S Knudsen; Emanuel F Petricoin; Pankaj K Singh; Jeffrey M Macdonald; Nhan L Tran; Costas A Lyssiotis; Haoqiang Ying; Alec C Kimmelman; Adrienne D Cox; Channing J Der
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Authors:  Viviane Aline Oliveira Silva; Marcela Nunes Rosa; Aline Tansini; Olga Martinho; Amilcar Tanuri; Adriane Feijó Evangelista; Adriana Cruvinel Carloni; João Paulo Lima; Luiz Francisco Pianowski; Rui Manuel Reis
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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 5.923

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