| Literature DB >> 34067625 |
Mariapaola Nitti1, Caterina Ivaldo1, Nicola Traverso1, Anna Lisa Furfaro1.
Abstract
Heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) plays a key role in cell adaptation to stressors through the antioxidant, antiapoptotic, and anti-inflammatory properties of its metabolic products. For these reasons, in cancer cells, HO-1 can favor aggressiveness and resistance to therapies, leading to poor prognosis/outcome. Genetic polymorphisms of HO-1 promoter have been associated with an increased risk of cancer progression and a high degree of therapy failure. Moreover, evidence from cancer biopsies highlights the possible correlation between HO-1 expression, pathological features, and clinical outcome. Indeed, high levels of HO-1 in tumor specimens often correlate with reduced survival rates. Furthermore, HO-1 modulation has been proposed in order to improve the efficacy of antitumor therapies. However, contrasting evidence on the role of HO-1 in tumor biology has been reported. This review focuses on the role of HO-1 as a promising biomarker of cancer progression; understanding the correlation between HO-1 and clinical data might guide the therapeutic choice and improve the outcome of patients in terms of prognosis and life quality.Entities:
Keywords: HO-1; Nrf2; biomarker; cancer progression; patients; prognosis; therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067625 PMCID: PMC8155918 DOI: 10.3390/antiox10050789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Schematic representation of heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) activity and regulation. HO-1 induction can be regulated at the transcriptional level by several stress-related transcription factors (Nrf2, AP-1, NF-kB, and HIF-1). Two polymorphisms that modify HO-1 inducibility have been indicated. Post-transcriptional regulation can involve miRNA. HO-1 regulates intracellular heme level catalyzing its degradation into biliverdin, carbon monoxide (CO), and ferrous iron (Fe2+). Biliverdin is converted into bilirubin by biliverdin reductase A (BVRA). Free iron activates iron transporters and induces the expression of ferritin. HO-1 metabolic products exert pro-survival activities, as indicated. A truncated form of HO-1, formed by signal peptide peptidase (SSP) cleavage, with nuclear localization and no enzymatic activity, has been described.
Correlation among HO-1 expression, aggressiveness, and outcomes in histological specimens.
| Tumor | HO-1 | Nrf2 | Grade and Stage | Additional | Metastasis, Lymph Node, | Clinical and | Disease | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Astrocytoma | High level | n.e. | Grade II and III | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | Poor OS | [ |
| Clear cell renal cell | High level | High level | No correlation | n.e. | No correlation | No significant | Poor prognosis | [ |
| Colangiocarcinoma | High level | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | No association | No significant | Poor OS | [ |
| Gastric cancer | High level | High level | Poor | Positive | Positive | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
| Gallbladder cancer | High level | High level | Moderately | Positive | Metastasis | No significant | Poor OS | [ |
| Hepatocellular | High level | n.e. | Poor | n.e. | Microvascular and capsular | High levels of | No significant | [ |
| Hormone refractory | High level | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | Cancer progression | n.e. | [ |
| Laryngeal cancer | High level | High level | No correlation with | High level | No correlation | No correlation | n.e. | [ |
| Melanoma | High level | n.e. | n.e. | Positive | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
| Neuroblastoma | High level | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | Poor OS | [ |
| Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer | High level | n.e. | Tumor grade G3 | Ki-67 and p53 | n.e. | No significant | Poor prognosis | [ |
| High level | n.e. | Tumor grade G3 | Positive | Lymph vascular | n.e. | Low RFS | [ | |
| High level | n.e. | n.e. | Positive | High MVD | n.e. | n.e. | [ | |
| High level | High level | n.e. | Correlation with HIF-1α, HIF-2α, VEGF | n.e. | Increased | n.e. | [ | |
| Non-small cell lung | High level | n.e. | Stage III-IV | Positive | High metastatic | No correlation | Poor prognosis | [ |
| High level | n.e. | Stage III-IV | n.e. | Lymph node | No correlation | No significant | [ | |
| Ovarian cancer | High level | n.e. | Serous | n.e. | Lymph node | Non optimal-debulking | Poor OS | [ |
| Prostate cancer | High level | n.e. | Localized tumor | PTEN | n.e. | n.e. | Relapse after radical | [ |
| Thyroid cancer | High level | n.e. | Positive | BRAFV600E mutation | No significant | Correlation with | n.e. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
| Acute myeloid leukemia | High level | n.e. | n.e. | Positive | n.e. | n.e. | Correlation with | [ |
| High level | n.e. | Correleation with | Correlation with RET gene | n.e. | Correlation with | n.e. | [ | |
| Chronic myeloid | Higher level in | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | Tumor progression | Correlation with | [ |
| Myelodysplastic | High level | n.e. | Correlation with high-risk and very high-risk patients | Positive | n.e. | Progression to AML | n.e. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
| Colorectal cancer | High level in cancer cells | n.e. | Stage III | n.e. | Lymph node | No significant | Poor prognosis | [ |
| Glioblastoma | High level in | n.e. | Grade IV | n.e. | Positive correlation with vascular | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
| Glioma | HO-1 positive Treg | n.e. | Correlation with | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
| Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer | High level in cancer cells and | n.e. | Correlation with high grade | COX-1 | MVD, LVD, PI, | No association with age and gender | No association with | [ |
| Prostate cancer | HO-1 positive | n.e. | High-grade tumors | n.e. | Bone metastasis | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
| Colorectal cancer | High level | n.e. | Invasive CRC | Significant | n.e. | Significant | Better | [ |
| High level | n.e. | n.e. | n.e. | Low vascular | n.e. | Better survival rate | [ | |
| Gastric cancer | High level | n.e. | Well and moderate | n.e. | Negative lymph node metastasis | n.e. | Better | [ |
| Oral squamous cell | High level | n.e. | Well-differentiated Grade G1 | n.e. | Low lymph node | No association | n.e. | [ |
| Small intestinal | High level | n.e. | Low T stage | n.e. | Low pancreatic | n.e. | Tend to have longer OS | [ |
|
| ||||||||
| Breast cancer | High level in | n.e. | Grade I-II (>80%) | Positive | Negative | Reduced tumor | Longer OS with | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | High level in cancer cells and in stromal cells | n.e. | Well-differentiated | n.e. | No correlation with lymph node and liver metastasis | n.e. | n.e. | [ |
| Head and neck | High level | n.e. | High rate of HO-1 | n.e. | n.e. | No association | n.e. | [ |
Tumors are listed alphabetically. List of table abbreviations. n.e., not evaluated; AD, adenocarcinoma; AFP, alpha feto protein; CEA, carcinoempryonic antigen; ISUP, International Society of Urologic Pathologists; LVD, lymph vascular density; MTS, median survival time; MVD, microvascular density; OS, overall survival; PI, proliferation index: PFS, progression free survival; RFS, recurrence free survival; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma.
HO-1 inhibitory tools.
| Pharmacological Inhibitors | Benefits | Drawbacks | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Metalloporphyrins Zinc II protoporphyrin IX (ZnPPIX) Tin protoporphyrin IX (SnPPIX) Tin mesoporphyrin IX (SnMPIX) |
Competitive inhibitors Well proved activity in vitro and in vivo |
Non selective on HO-1 isoform Active on other heme-dependent enzymes (NOS, sGC, and CYP) HO-1 inducers Photo reactive Poor soluble | [ | |
|
Polyethylene-glycol (PEG-ZnPPIX) Amphiphilic styrene-maleic acid copolymer (SMA-ZnPPIX) |
Water-soluble | [ | ||
|
| ||||
|
Azalanstat Other imidazole-derived compounds (OB-24) |
Non competitive inhibitors Selective on HO-1 isoforms Limited inhibitory activity on NOS, sGC, and CYP Water-soluble |
Not well studied and not tested in clinical trials | [ | |
|
| ||||
| Small interfering RNA and short hairpin RNA |
Specific targeting HO-1 mRNA | Limited therapeutic application | [ | |
| CRISPR/Cas9 |
Genetic ablation of HO-1 gene Stable knock-down High efficiency of HO-1 inhibition | Limited therapeutic application | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the effects of HO-1 activation and generation of its metabolic products in healthy and cancer cells. HO-1 activation is involved in antioxidant defenses and in healthy cells promotes the hormetic response and cancer prevention through the generation of bilirubin and CO. In cancer cells, HO-1 favors cancer progression, and its inhibition represents a therapeutic opportunity. However, also HO-1 over-activation can be proposed as a therapeutic option, as it can favor unconventional ferroptosis through the accumulation of pro-oxidant-free iron.