| Literature DB >> 34895252 |
Yu Wang1,2,3, Jiang Du4,5,6, Xuemei Wu7,8,9, Ahmed Abdelrehem10, Yu Ren11, Chao Liu4,5,6, Xuan Zhou12,13,14, Sinan Wang15,16,17.
Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process seen in eukaryotes and is essentially a lysosome-dependent protein degradation pathway. The dysregulation of autophagy is often associated with the pathogenesis of numerous types of cancers, and can not only promote the survival of cancer but also trigger the tumor cell death. During cancer development, the microbial community might predispose cells to tumorigenesis by promoting mucosal inflammation, causing systemic disorders, and may also regulate the immune response to cancer. The complex relationship between autophagy and microorganisms can protect the body by activating the immune system. In addition, autophagy and microorganisms can crosstalk with each other in multifaceted ways to influence various physiological and pathological responses involved in cancer progression. Various molecular mechanisms, correlating the microbiota disorders and autophagy activation, control the outcomes of protumor or antitumor responses, which depend on the cancer type, tumor microenvironment and disease stage. In this review, we mainly emphasize the leading role of autophagy during the interaction between pathogenic microorganisms and human cancers and investigate the various molecular mechanisms by which autophagy modulates such complicated biological processes. Moreover, we also highlight the possibility of curing cancers with multiple molecular agents targeting the microbiota/autophagy axis. Finally, we summarize the emerging clinical trials investigating the therapeutic potential of targeting either autophagy or microbiota as anticancer strategies, although the crosstalk between them has not been explored thoroughly.Entities:
Keywords: Autophagy; Cancer progression; Microbiota; Target therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34895252 PMCID: PMC8665582 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-021-01461-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Overview of the mechanisms by which bacteria regulate tumor progression. Pathogenic bacteria mainly come from oral and gastrointestinal flora. Different kinds of bacteria can promote the occurrence, development and metastasis of tumors by causing host adaptive immune responses, cell cycle arrest, DNA transcription changes and DNA damage, reactive oxygen species accumulation and the activation of various signaling pathways, such as Wnt/β-catenin, NF-κB, and STAT3 signaling
Microbiota involved in cancer progression
| System | Cancer type | Microbiota | Tumor promotion | Tumor Behavior | Molecular Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Digestive System | Colorectal Cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation and invasion | [ | ||
| Tumor promotion | Proliferation | [ | ||||
| Tumor promotion | Tumorigenesis | [ | ||||
| Tumor promotion | Proliferation and dysplasia | [ | ||||
| Tumor promotion | Initiation and proliferation | [ | ||||
| Tumor promotion | Initiation and proliferation | [ | ||||
| Tumor promotion | Initiation | [ | ||||
| Tumor suppression | Proliferation and metastasis | [ | ||||
| Tumor suppression | Cancer development | [ | ||||
| Tumor suppression | Tumorigenesis | [ | ||||
| Gastric Cancer | Tumor promotion | Invasion | [ | |||
| Esophageal Carcinoma | Tumor promotion | Proliferation and migration | [ | |||
| Pancreatic Cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation | [ | |||
| Liver Cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation | [ | |||
| Oral Cancer | Tumor suppression | Proliferation | [ | |||
| Tumor promotion | Proliferation | [ | ||||
| Non-Digestive System | Lung Cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation | [ | ||
| Tumor promotion | Cancer development | [ | ||||
| Breast Cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation and migration | [ | |||
| Tumor suppression | Proliferation | [ |
FadA Fusobacterium adhesin A, STAT3 Signal transducer and activator of transcription3, TLR2 toll-like receptor2, TLR4 toll-like receptor4, ROS reactive oxygen species, PCWBR2 putative cell wall binding repeat 2, SGMB Streptococcus gallolyticus member bacteria, IL-1 interleukin 1, COX-2 cyclooxygenase-2, IL-8 interleukin 8, CCR5 CC chemokine receptor 5, VCAM1 Vascular cell adhesion molecular 1, CAF cancer-associated fibroblasts, ESCC esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, IL-1β interleukin 1β, IL-23 interleukin 23, PI3K phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, PDCD4 programmed cell death 4, AP-1 activating protein-1
Fig. 2Different proteins or small molecules regulate autophagy pathways. Autophagy is a key regulator during tumorigenesis. It can not only promote cancer by providing nutrition for tumor cells but can also inhibit cancer progression by increasing apoptosis. Autophagy can be divided into four parts: initiation, elongation, maturation, and the fusion of autophagosomes and lysosomes. ATGs participate in each step and eventually promote or inhibit cancer
Regulatory factors regulating autophagy and tumor behaviors
| Regulatory factors | ATGs | Stage of autophagy | Cancer type | Tumor promotion | Tumor Behavior | Molecular mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TRPM3 | ULK1 LC3 | Induce autophagy initiation and maturation | Clear cell renal cell carcinoma | Tumor promotion | Proliferation | TRPM3 promotes autophagy through miR-214 and CAMKK2-ULK1 cascade, thus supports the ccRCC cell growth. | [ |
| TRIM59 | Beclin-1 | induce autophagy nucleation | Non-small cell lung cancer | Tumor promotion | Tumor progression | TRIM59 promotes the transcription and the ubiquitination of BECN1 to facilitate tumor progression. | [ |
| POX | Beclin-1 LC3 | Induce autophagy nucleation and maturation | Colorectal cancer | Tumor promotion | Tumor survival | POX induces autophagy activation and promotes tumor cell survival in hypoxic TME. | [ |
| CK1α | ATG7 | Induce autophagy maturation | Lung tumor | Tumor suppression | Proliferation | CK1α activates PTEN/AKT/FOXO3a/ ATG7 axis to induce autophagy and suppress lung tumor growth. | [ |
| IFN-γ | LC3 | Induce autophagy maturation | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Tumor suppression | Proliferation | IFN-γ induces autophagy through IRF-1 to inhibit tumor growth. | [ |
| IFN-γ | Beclin-1 | Induce autophagy nucleation | Gastric cancer | Tumor suppression | Tumorigenesis | IFN-γ induces autophagy through upregulation of Beclin-1 for inhibiting tumorigenesis. | [ |
| HOTAIR | Beclin-1 LC3 | Inhibit autophagic activity | Cervical cancer | Tumor promotion | EMT process and radioresistance | HOTAIR attenuates sensitivity to radiotherapy by reduction of autophagy and reversal of EMT via Wnt signaling. | [ |
| CTA | LC3 p62 | Inhibit autophagy maturation | Osteosarcoma | Tumor suppression | Apoptosis and chemoresistance | CTA promotes apoptosis and reduces chemoresistance via downregulating BNIP3/BNIP3L and autophagy. | [ |
| miR-93 | Beclin-1 ATG4B ATG5 | Inhibit autophagy nucleation and maturation | Glioblastoma | Tumor promotion | Chemoresistance | miRNA-93 inhibits multiple autophagy protein and reduces chemoresistance in GSCs. | [ |
miR-18a* miR-4802 | ATG7 ULK1 | Inhibit autophagy initiation and maturation | Colorectal cancer | Tumor promotion | Chemoresistance | Selective loss of miR-18a*/4802 activates cancer autophagy and enhances CRC chemoresistance. | [ |
| FXYD6 | Beclin-1 LC3 p62 | Inhibit autophagy nucleation and maturation | Colorectal cancer | Tumor suppression | Chemoresistance | FXYD6 regulates cell autophagy via ATP-α1 activity and decreases chemotherapy resistance. | [ |
| IRF1 | Beclin-1 ATG7 | Inhibit autophagy nucleation and maturation | Breast cancer | Tumor suppression | Chemoresistance | IRF1 inhibits the formation of autophagic vacuole and BECN1 expression to restore drug sensitivity to ICI. | [ |
| HMGB1 | LC3 p62 | Induce autophagy maturation | Leukemia | Tumor promotion | Chemoresistance | HMGB1 induces autophagy through the PI3K/MEK/ERK pathway, thus promotes chemotherapy resistance. | [ |
TRPM3 transient receptor potential melastatin-3, ULK1 unc-51-like kinase 1, LC3A light chain 3A, LC3B light chain 3B, CAMKK2 calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase-2, TRIM59 tripartite motif 59, BECN1 Beclin1, POX Proline Oxidase, CK1α casein kinase 1 α, ATG7 autophagy related 7, IFN-γ interferon γ, IRF1 interferon regulatory factor 1, EMT epithelial-mesenchymal transition, DOX doxorubicin, BNIP3 Bcl-2-interacting protein 3, BNIP3L BCL-2-interacting protein 3 like, ATG4B autophagy related 4B, ATG5 autophagy related 5, GSC glioblastoma cell, FXYD6 FXYD domain containing ion transport regulator 6, ICI immune checkpoint inhibitors, HMGB1 high mobility group box-1
Fig. 3Crosstalk between autophagy and microbiota in cancer. The crosstalk between autophagy and microbiota regulates multiple physiological and pathological responses, including cancer progression. Autophagy can play a role in microbiota-mediated tumorigenesis, metastasis and drug resistance in different cancers. H. pylori regulates miR-543, miR-125b-5p and autophagy through its virulence factor CagA to promote tumor occurrence. F. nucleatum mainly regulates autophagy through TLR/MyD88 and its downstream miRNA-18a*/4802 and then plays a cancer-promoting role in colorectal cancer. P. gingivalis can induce G1 cell cycle arrest. C. jejuni can enhance cell radiosensitivity by producing cytolethal distending toxin (CDT). S. typhimurium inhibits tumor cell survival through autophagy
Bacteria involved in autophagy-regulated tumors
| Bacteria | Autophagy promotion / inhibition | ATGs | Stage of autophagy | Cancer type | Tumor promotion / suppression | Tumor behavior | Molecular mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibit autophagy | LC3 p62 | Autophagy maturation | Gastric cancer | Tumor promotion | Tumorigenesis | [ | ||
| Inhibit autophagy | LC3 p62 | Autophagy maturation | Gastric cancer | Tumor promotion | Migration and invasion | CagA promotes miR-543 overexpression which can suppress autophagy, leading to tumor cell migration and invasion. | [ | |
| Promote autophagy | LC3 Beclin-1 | Autophagy nucleation and maturation, | Colon cancer | Tumor promotion | Proliferation and invasion | CagA-positive | [ | |
| Promote autophagy | ULK1 ATG7 | Autophagy initiation and maturation | Colorectal cancer | Tumor promotion | Chemoresistance | [ | ||
| Promote autophagy | ATG7 LC3 | Autophagy maturation | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Tumor promotion | Chemoresistance | [ | ||
| Promote autophagy | LC3 Beclin1 | Autophagy nucleation and maturation, | Colorectal cancer | Tumor promotion | Metastasis | [ | ||
| Promote autophagy | LC3 | Autophagy maturation | Oral cancer | Tumor suppression | Proliferation | [ | ||
| Promote autophagy | ATG-5 Beclin1 | Autophagy maturation | Liver cancer Gastric cancer | Tumor suppression | Proliferation | Inhibiting autophagy enhances the cancer-cell killing ability of | [ | |
| Inhibit autophagy | ATG-5 ATG-12 | Autophagy maturation | Prostate cancer | Tumor suppression | Radioresistance | [ |
LC3 light chain 3, CagA cytotoxin-associated gene A, ULK1 unc-51-like kinase 1, ATG7 autophagy-related gene 7, CARD3 caspase activation and recruitment domain 3, CDT cytolethal distending toxin
Autophagy related drugs and associated clinical trials
| Drugs | Cancer type | Clinical trial / Animal experiment | Phase | Ref. / Trial ID |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chloroquine | Small cell lung cancer | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT00969306 |
| Small cell lung cancer | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT01575782 | |
| Breast cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT02333890 | |
| Hydroxychloroquine | Estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer | Clinical trial | Phase Ib/II | NCT02414776 |
| Prostate carcinoma | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT02421575 | |
| Solid tumors | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT03015324 | |
| Melanoma | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT00962845 | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Clinical trial | Phase I/II | NCT02013778 | |
| B-CLL | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT00771056 | |
| Renal cancer | Clinical trial | Phase Ib | NCT01144169 | |
| Sorafenib | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Clinical trial | Phase Ib/II | NCT03211416 |
| Lys05 | Melanoma, colon cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| DQ661 | Melanoma, pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| SAR405, SB02024 | Melanoma, colorectal cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| Mefloquine | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| Spautin-1 | Prostate cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| Melanoma | Animal experiment | / | [ | |
| Rapamycin | Bladder cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT04375813 |
| Advanced cancers | Clinical trial | Phase Ib | NCT00707135 | |
| HNSCC | Animal experiment | / | [ | |
| Lung squamous cell carcinoma | Animal experiment | / | [ | |
| Temsirolimus | Prostate cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT00919035 |
| Advanced cancers | Clinical trial | Phase I/II | NCT00877773 | |
| HNSCC | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT01172769 | |
| Advanced bladder cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT01827943 | |
| Cervical cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT01026792 | |
| Metastatic neuroendocrine carcinoma | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT00093782 | |
| Liver cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT01079767 | |
| Endometrial carcinoma | Clinical trial | Phase IIa | NCT02093598 |
HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, Trial ID registered number at Clinical Trials.gov
Microbiota related drugs and associated clinical trials
| Drugs | Cancer type | Clinical trial / Animal experiment | Phase | Ref. / Trial ID |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bismuth colloidal pectin granules quadruple therapy | Gastric cancer | Clinical trial | Phase IV | NCT04660123 |
| Itraconazole | Breast cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma | Animal experiment | / | [ | |
| Colon cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ | |
| Esophageal cancer | Clinical trial | Phase I | NCT02749513 | |
| Probiotics | Colon cancer | Clinical trial | Not Applicable | NCT03072641 |
| Colorectal cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT00936572 | |
| Bifidobacterium | Melanoma | Animal experiment | / | [ |
| Colon Cancer | Clinical trial | Phase II | NCT00936572 | |
| Colorectal cancer | Animal experiment | / | [ |
Trial ID registered number at Clinical Trials.gov