| Literature DB >> 34811636 |
Liying Wang1,2, Yanchun Quan3,4,5, Yanxi Zhu6,7,8, Xiaoli Xie6,7,8, Zhiqiang Wang6,7,8, Long Wang6,7,8, Xiuhong Wei9, Fengyuan Che10,11,12,13.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: REG3A, a member of the third subclass of the Reg family, has been found in a variety of tissues but is not detected in immune cells. In the past decade, it has been determined that REG3A expression is regulated by injury, infection, inflammatory stimuli, and pro-cytokines via different signaling pathways, and it acts as a tissue-repair, bactericidal, and anti-inflammatory molecule in human diseases. Recently, the role of REG3A in cancer has received increasing attention. The present article aims to investigate the structure, expression, regulation, function of REG3A, and to highlight the potential role of REG3A in tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Gene expression; Receptor; Regenerating protein REG3A; Regulation; Signaling pathway
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34811636 PMCID: PMC8825409 DOI: 10.1007/s11033-021-06904-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Rep ISSN: 0301-4851 Impact factor: 2.316
Fig. 1Structure of REG3A. a Secondary structure of REG3A. REG3A is a 19-kDa protein that consists of 175 amino acids. REG3A consists of three domains: signal peptide (1–26aa), propeptide (27–37aa) and C-type lectin domain (47–173aa). Trypsin cleavages N-terminal of REG3A at the Arg37–Ile38 peptide bond and the proteolytic processing of REG3A was necessary for peptidoglycan binding. The EPN motif in CTLD domain is essential for bactericidal activity. b X-ray structure of REG3A (PDB code 4MTH.pdb), with its characteristic “long loop” structure
Fig. 2Regulation and signaling of REG3A. a REG3A could be regulated by various stimulators. Once our body suffered injury, infection or other stimuli, REG3A expression was induced through the recognition receptor and adaptors, including TLR, IL-17RA, IL-22R, SCFA receptor or MyD88. b As a secreted protein, EXTL3 may serve as one of the potential receptors for REG3A according to current research. Other potential receptors have not yet been identified. REG3A could promote cell proliferation, suppress inflammation and apoptosis via regulating multiple signaling pathways
Expression and clinical data of REG3A in human tumors
| Tumor type | Disease | No. of samples | Methods | Expression level | Association | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | Hepatocellular carcinomas | 42 | RNA extraction, Northern blot and RT–PCR | Increased | Correlated to the β-catenin status | [ |
| Liver | Hepatocellular carcinomas | 192 | ELISA | Increased | Serum marker of HCC | [ |
| Liver, bile duct | Hepatocarcinoma and Cholangiocarcinoma | 35 | Northern blot, ELISA, RT-PCR and IHC | Increased | Implicated in differentiation and proliferation | [ |
| Liver | Hepatocellular carcinomas | 88 | RT-PCR and IHC | Increased | REG3A/p42/44 pathway/PDGF-ββ signaling and tumor-stroma crosstalk | [ |
| Pancreas | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | 76 | RT-PCR and IHC | Increased | Correlated with nodal involvement, distant metastasis and short survival | [ |
| Pancreas | Pancreatic cancer | 36 | PCR and Western blotting | Increased | Coexistence of SOCS3 methylation | [ |
| Pancreas | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | 251 | ELISA and IHC | Increased | Favors perineural invasion in PDA | [ |
| Gastric | Gastric cancer | 41 | PCR and Western blotting | Increased | Activation of the JAK2/STAT3 signal pathway | [ |
| Gastric | Gastric adenocarcinomas | 30 | RT-PCR and IHC | Decreased | DNA methylation | [ |
| Gastric | Gastric cancer | 34 | PCR and Western blotting | Decreased | PI3K/Akt-GSK3β signaling pathway | [ |
| Colorectal | Colorectal carcinoma | 331 | IHC, TMA and WB | Increased | Reliable markers of favorable prognosis of CRC patients | [ |
| Colorectal | Colorectal cancer | 82 | RT-PCR and IHC | Increased | Activating AKT and ERK1/2 pathways | [ |
| Breast | Breast cancer | 15 | RT-PCR | Decreased | Down-regulated protein of key factors with JAK2/STAT3 pathway | [ |
Fig. 3Roles of REG3A in cancer. REG3A has dual roles in cancer research, which is unlike in non-cancer cells. For one side, REG3A was high expressed in many cancer tissues and cell lines and promoted cancer cell proliferation, migration and invasion through activating JAK/STAT3, AKT or ERK signaling pathways. The overexpressed REG3A could be regulated by LncRNA, inflammatory environment, or Wnt pathway. For another, REG3A had low levels in part of tumor tissues. And this expression suppression may be related to DNA methylation. Cells showed growth inhibition, cell cycle arrested and enhanced chemosensitivity and radiosensitivity when REG3A was overexpression. Therefore, REG3A acted as a tumorigenesis or anti-tumor factor in different tumors