| Literature DB >> 34066181 |
Fengjuan Fan1, Klaus Podar2,3.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable hematologic malignancy characterized by the clonal expansion of malignant plasma cells within the bone marrow. Activator Protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factors (TFs), comprised of the JUN, FOS, ATF and MAF multigene families, are implicated in a plethora of physiologic processes and tumorigenesis including plasma cell differentiation and MM pathogenesis. Depending on the genetic background, the tumor stage, and cues of the tumor microenvironment, specific dimeric AP-1 complexes are formed. For example, AP-1 complexes containing Fra-1, Fra-2 and B-ATF play central roles in the transcriptional control of B cell development and plasma cell differentiation, while dysregulation of AP-1 family members c-Maf, c-Jun, and JunB is associated with MM cell proliferation, survival, drug resistance, bone marrow angiogenesis, and bone disease. The present review article summarizes our up-to-date knowledge on the role of AP-1 family members in plasma cell differentiation and MM pathophysiology. Moreover, it discusses novel, rationally derived approaches to therapeutically target AP-1 TFs, including protein-protein and protein-DNA binding inhibitors, epigenetic modifiers and natural products.Entities:
Keywords: activator protein 1 (AP-1); bone marrow (BM); microenvironment; multiple myeloma (MM); plasma cell (PC); transcription factor (TF)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066181 PMCID: PMC8151277 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Function of AP-1 in plasma cell biology and multiple myeloma pathophysiology.
| AP-1 Member | Activity | Mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Fra-1 | Suppresses B cell differentiation into PCs and decreases Ig production | Inhibition of | [ |
| Fra-2 | Enhances B cell proliferation and | Transcriptional induction of FOXO-1 and IRF-4 expression, and their downstream targets Ikaros, IL7Ra, Rag1/2 and Aiolos | [ |
| B-ATF | Essential for GC formation | Downstream of FOXO-1, modulating the expression of | [ |
| Regulates B cell activation | Binding of B-ATF containing AP-1 complexes and IRF-4 to the AICE motif of target genes | [ | |
|
| |||
| c-Maf | Overexpressed in MM | Chromosomal translocation t(14;16), t(14;20) | [ |
| Promote MM cell proliferation, | Regulation of cyclin D2, ARK5, DEPTOR, and integrin β7 expression | [ | |
| Confer resistance to PIs bortezomib and carfilzomib | Abrogation of GSK3β-mediated | [ | |
| c-Jun | Lower expression in primary MM cells compared to normal PCs | Unknown | [ |
| Upregulated in MM cells by | Caspase-mediated c-Abl cleavage | [ | |
| JunB | BMSC- and IL-6- triggered upregulation in MM cells | MEK/MAPK- and NFκB- dependent | [ |
| Promotes MM cell proliferation | Cell cycle regulation | ||
| Protects MM cells against | Inhibition of apoptotic pathways | ||
| Promotes MM BM angiogenesis | Transcriptional regulation of angiogenic factors VEGF, VEGFB and IGF1 | [ | |
|
| |||
| c-Fos | Regulates OC differentiation | Induced by RANKL and M-CSF | [ |
| Fra-1 | Regulates OB activity | Regulation of bone matrix component production by OBs (osteocalcin, collagen1α2, and matrix Gla protein) | [ |
| Fra-2 | Regulates OB differentiation | Transcriptional regulation of osteocalcin and collagen1α2 | [ |
| Controls OC survival and size | Transcriptional induction of LIF via | [ | |
| JunB | Regulates OB proliferation | Cyclin D1 and cyclin A expression, | [ |
| Regulates OC proliferation | Dimerization partner of c-Fos (?) | ||
Abbreviations: PCs, plasma cells; Ig, immunoglobulin; GC, germinal center; CSR, class switch recombination; AID, activation- induced cytidine deaminase; GLTs, germline transcripts; AICE, AP-1-IRF composite element; MM, multiple myeloma; BM, bone marrow; BMSC, bone marrow stromal cells; PIs, proteasome inhibitors; OC, osteoclast; RANKL, receptor activator of NFκB ligand; M-CSF, macrophage colony stimulating factor; NFAT, nuclear factor of activated T cells; LIF: leukaemia inhibitory factor; OB, osteoblast.
Figure 1Functions of Activator Protein-1 (AP-1)/JUN, FOS, ATF and MAF transcription factor (TF) subfamily members in plasma cell (PC) biology, multiple myeloma (MM) pathophysiology, bone metabolism and MM associated bone disease. (A) Functions of AP-1 TFs in PC biology. (B) Functions of AP-1 TFs in MM pathogenesis. (C) Functions of AP-1 TFs in bone metabolism and MM associated bone disease. Ig, immunoglobulin; GC, germinal center; CSR, class switch recombination; AID, activation- induced cytidine deaminase; GLT, germline transcript; AICEs, AP-1-IRF composite elements; BM, bone marrow; BMSC, bone marrow stromal cell; PI, proteasome inhibitor; OC, osteoclast; RANKL, receptor activator of NFκB ligand; M-CSF, macrophage colony stimulating factor; NFAT, nuclear factor of activated T cells; LIF, leukaemia inhibitory factor; OB, osteoblast.
Figure 2Pathophysiologic functions of AP-1 TFs in MM and derived therapeutic strategies. Intrinsic cellular (translocations, mutations) and intermittent extracellular environmental signals (e.g., growth factors, cytokines) trigger AP-1 TF activity via various signaling pathways including the extracellular-signal regulated kinase (ERK), JUN amino-terminal kinase (JNK), p38 and NFκB. Target genes of AP-1 TFs play a pivotal role in MM pathogenesis mediating tumor cell proliferation, adhesion, migration and invasion, apoptosis, survival and drug resistance as well as BM angiogenesis. Besides inhibiting TF expression by siRNAs or miRNAs, novel approaches to target TFs in general, and AP-1 TFs in particular, include: disrupting the interaction of TFs with either functionally critical protein binding partners (e.g., by peptide antagonists of dimerization) or the DNA (by oligodeoxynucleotide decoys, pyrrole-imidazole polyamides or small molecules); modulating the epigenetic events through DNA methylation, histone methylation or modification (e.g., by histone deacetyltransferases inhibitors (HDACi) or protein arginine methyltransferases inhibitors (PRMTi)); inducing proteasomal degradation of TFs by altering their ubiquitylation, as well as by utilizing PROteolysis-TArgeting Chimaeras (PROTACs) or Degronomids; and inhibiting TF expression by modulating their regulators (i.e., MAPK- or NFκB- signaling molecules).
Potential strategies to target AP-1 and candidate inhibitors.
| Strategies | Inhibitors | Targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition of protein-protein | Peptidic inhibitors of c-Maf | Leucine zipper motif of c-Maf | [ |
| Peptide antagonists of c-Jun | Leucine zipper motif of c-Jun | [ | |
| Peptide antagonists of c-Jun: c-Fos | Leucine zipper motif of c-Jun or c-Fos | [ | |
| Leucine zipper peptide | Leucine zipper dimerization domains | [ | |
| Inhibition of protein- | T-5224 | bZIP domain of c-Fos/AP-1 -DNA | [ |
| MLN944 (XR5944) | TRE | [ | |
| SR11302 | TRE | [ | |
| Dominant negative peptide A-Fos | bZIP domain of c-Jun | [ | |
| Regulation of epigenetic events | Valproic acid (VPA) | HDAC | [ |
| TC-E 5003 (TC-E) | PRMT | [ | |
| Natural products | Curcumin | Suppression of c-Fos and c-Jun | [ |
| Resveratrol | Suppression of c-Fos and c-Jun | [ | |
| Veratramine | TRE | [ |
Abbreviations: bZIP, basic leucine zipper; TRE, TPA-response element; HDAC, histone deacetyltransferases; PRMT, protein arginine methyltransferases.