| Literature DB >> 35501821 |
Shuo Qie1,2,3,4, Nianli Sang5.
Abstract
Stanniocalcin 2 (STC2) is a glycoprotein which is expressed in a broad spectrum of tumour cells and tumour tissues derived from human breast, colorectum, stomach, esophagus, prostate, kidney, liver, bone, ovary, lung and so forth. The expression of STC2 is regulated at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels; particularly, STC2 is significantly stimulated under various stress conditions like ER stress, hypoxia and nutrient deprivation. Biologically, STC2 facilitates cells dealing with stress conditions and prevents apoptosis. Importantly, STC2 also promotes the development of acquired resistance to chemo- and radio- therapies. In addition, multiple groups have reported that STC2 overexpression promotes cell proliferation, migration and immune response. Therefore, the overexpression of STC2 is positively correlated with tumour growth, invasion, metastasis and patients' prognosis, highlighting its potential as a biomarker and a therapeutic target. This review focuses on discussing the regulation, biological functions and clinical importance of STC2 in human cancers. Future perspectives in this field will also be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer therapy; Prognosis; Stanniocalcin 2; Stress Response; Tumorigenesis; Tumour progression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35501821 PMCID: PMC9063168 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02370-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1The comparaison of STC2 protein sequences among indicated species. It suggests highly phylogenetic consevation in different vertebrates
Fig. 2The mRNA expression of STC2 in human normal tissues. The panels A & B were generated using online tool: The Protein Atlas (https://www.proteinatlas.org/)
The clinical importance of STC2 in human cancers
| Tumours | Patient Numbers | Detection Methods | Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | 110 | qRT-PCR | Elevated STC2 mRNA levels are correlated with higher DFS rates [ |
| 245 | FISH | STC2 expression is associated with improved DFS rates [ | |
| 110 | IHC | No relationship with progression free survival is demonstrated [ | |
| 985 + 979 | Microarray | STC2 levels are correlated with good prognosis [ | |
| 699 | IHC | No correlation is revealed between STC2 levels and tumour recurrence [ | |
| 477 | IHC | STC2 is associated with favorable outcome in male breast cancer patients [ | |
| Colorectal cancer | 139 | qRT-PCR | High STC2 levels are correlated with poor prognosis [ |
| 47 | qRT-PCR | STC2 expression is associated with tumour size [ | |
| 77 | IHC | STC2 levels are correlated with tumour stage and patients’ survival [ | |
| 383 | Microarray | STC2 expression is associated with tumour stages [ | |
| 115 | IHC | STC2 levels are correlated with tumour metastasis and disease stages [ | |
| 379 | RNA-Seq | Elevated STC2 expression is associated with poor prognosis [ | |
| 202 | qRT-PCR | High STC2 mRNA expression is correlated with poor postoperative survival [ | |
| Gastric cancer | 108 | qRT-PCR | STC2 mRNA levels are higher in cancer than those in normal gastric mucosa, and associated with tumour progression and poor prognosis [ |
| 93 | qRT-PCR | Blood STC2 levels are correlated with tumour progression and poor prognosis [ | |
| ESCC | 70 | qRT-PCR | Elevated STC2 mRNA levels are associated with lymph node metastasis and poor prognosis [ |
| Prostate cancer | 53 | IHC | STC2 IHC staining score is correlated with high Gleason scores [ |
| RCC | 108 | IHC | For all RCC, clear cell RCC, papillary RCC, patients with high cytosolic STC2 staining have a poor prognosis than those with low expression [ |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | 94 | IHC | Overall survival rate of patients with high STC2 levels is significantly lower than those with low STC2 expression [ |
| 62 | IHC | STC2 is a valuable prognostic marker for poor outcome [ | |
| 81 | IHC | STC2 positive patients show poor outcome [ | |
| 111 | RNA-Seq | STC2 is regarded as a biomarker for evaluating patients’ prognosis [ | |
| 68 | IHC | STC2 expression is associated with poor progression [ | |
| 111 | RNA-Seq | STC2 can be applied to predict the overall survival rates of patients [ | |
| HNSCC | 298 | IHC | Elevated STC2 expression is correlated with poor outcome [ |
| 119 | IHC | High STC2 expression is significantly associated with poor survival [ | |
| 498 | RNA-Seq | High STC2 levels are correlated with poor prognosis [ | |
| HCC | 240 | IHC | STC2 expression is associated with poor survival [ |
| 200 | IHC | High STC2 is correlated with poor prognosis [ | |
| 258 | IHC | High STC2 expression can be utilized to predict overall survival [ | |
| 364 | RNA-Seq | STC2 expression is associated with poor prognosis of HCC [ | |
| Osteosarcoma | 88 | RNA-Seq | STC2 has an important influence on the survival of patients [ |
| 88 | RNA-Seq | STC2 is correlated with the patients’ prognosis and metastasis [ | |
| 87 | RNA-Seq | Elevated STC2 levels are associated with poor prognosis [ | |
| Ovarian cancer | 46 | qRT-PCR | Overexpression of STC2 by vascular cells in ovarian cancer is correlated with decreased disease-free interval [ |
| 278 | IHC | STC2 is associated with tumour grade, tumour histotype and poor overall survival [ | |
| Lung cancer | 115 | IHC | STC2 mediates the resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors [ |
| Pancreatic Cancer | 98 | qRT-PCR | STC2 expression is correlated with clinicopathological factors and patients’ prognosis [ |
| Endometrial cancer | 49 | IHC | High STC2 expression is associated with poor relapse-free survival [ |
| Cervical cancer | 92 | IHC | STC2 expression is correlated with shorter survival [ |
| Neuroblastoma | 50 | qRT-PCR | STC2 mRNA levels are associated with higher clinical stages [ |
| Gallbladder cancer | 46 + 80 | IHC | STC2 expression is correlated with clinical, pathological, and biological behaviors as well as poor prognosis of gallbladder cancer [ |
| Cholangiocarcinoma | 100 | IHC | Positive expression of STC2 is associated with progression and poor clinical outcomes [ |
Fig. 3The comparison of STC2 expression between human tumours and their relative normal counterparts using the online tool (http://gepia2.cancer-pku.cn/). Panel A: CHOL, cholangiocarcinoma; COAD, colon adenocarcinoma; ESCA, esophageal carcinoma; GBM, glioblastoma multiforme; HNSC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; KIRC, kidney renal clear cell carcinoma; LGG, brain lower grade glioma; OV, ovarian serous cystadenocarcinoma; READ, rectum adenocarcinoma; UCEC, uterine corpus endometrial carcinoma; UCS, uterine carcinosarcoma. Panel B: LAML, acute Myeloid Leukemia; SKCM, skin cutaneous melanoma. Panel C: ACC, Adrenocortical carcinoma; CESC, Cervical squamous cell carcinoma and endocervical adenocarcinoma; DLBC, Lymphoid Neoplasm Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma; KICH, Kidney Chromophobe; LIHC, Liver hepatocellular carcinoma; LUSC, Lung squamous cell carcinoma; PCPG, Pheochromocytoma and Paraganglioma; SARC, Sarcoma; STAD, Stomach adenocarcinoma; TGCT, Testicular Germ Cell Tumours; THYM, Thymoma. Panel D: BLCA, Bladder Urothelial Carcinoma; BRCA, Breast invasive carcinoma; KIRP, Kidney renal papillary cell carcinoma; LUAD, Lung adenocarcinoma; PAAD, Pancreatic adenocarcinoma; PRAD, Prostate adenocarcinoma; THCA, Thyroid carcinoma. Red bar: tumour tissues; Gray bar: normal tissues. Red star indicates p values less than 0.05
Fig. 4STC2 modulates the severity of ER stress response, promotes cell survival and prevents apoptosis. Hypoxia, nutrient depletion associated ATP depletion, and oxidative stress trigger ER stress. Similarly, therapeutic treatment and some compounds disrupting ER functions also trigger ER stress. Under such conditions, BiP, the negative regulator of ATF6, PERK and IRE1, is sequestrated by misfolded proteins accumulated in the ER lumen. The activation of ATF6 (tATF6, truncated and activated form), ATF4 and XBP1 leads to transcriptional upregulation of genes involved in ER homeostasis, ER biogenesis, inflammatory response, protein folding and degradation. Severe and prolonged ER stress leads to the activation of JNK/NF-κB and CHOP pathways which promote apoptosis. Under moderate stress conditions, the p-eIF2α-ATF4 axis serves as a modulator of the severity of ER stress response by activating three down stress genes: 1) as the negative regulator of ER stress, BiP upregulation facilitates restoring ER homeostasis; 2) GADD34, a phosphoprotein phosphatase, directly dephosphorylates eIF2α to attenuate ATF4-mediated stress response; and 3) importantly, STC2 performs its function through affecting ATF4 or calcineurin, a calcium and calmodulin dependent serine/threonine protein phosphatase that is evidenced by the report showing aluminium toxicity causes ER stress, which activates IRE1β, but not ATF4, finally leading to apoptosis
Fig. 5The biological functions of STC2 under hypoxic conditions. STC2 promoter contains hypoxia response elements (HREs) and amino acid response elements (AAREs). Under hypoxic conditions, HIF-1α is stabilized, and forms the HIF-1 heterodimer through interacting with HIF-1β. Then, HIF-1 is translocated into the nucleus where it binds to CBP/p300 and form a transcription complex to induce the expression of STC2. In addition, hypoxia also induces the expression of ATF4 through increased gene transcription, protein translation and protein stabilization. Thereafter, ATF4 is translocated into nucleus and form a transcriptional complex with co-factors to enhance the expression of downstream genes; however, it remains elusive whether ATF4 also contributes to STC2 upregulation under hypoxic conditions. Functionally, STC2 promotes cell cycle progression through enhancing cyclin D expression and Rb phosphorylation; STC2 induces epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) through upregulating mesenchymal markers (N-cadherin and vimentin) and downregulating E-cadherin; in addition, STC2 can drive cell migration and invasion through the upregulation of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) -2 and -9
Reported biological functions of STC2 in human cancers
| Biological functions | Involved processes | Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell proliferation | Promotes cell cycle progression | Induces cyclin D expression and Rb hyper-phosphorylation | [ |
| Cell survival | Suppresses apoptosis | Activates MAPK signaling Activates PI3K-Akt signaling Activates the Jun-Axl-Erk signaling | [ |
| Tumour metastasis | Cell migration and invasion | Promotes the production of MMPs Drives EMT through inducing N-cadherin and vimentin and suppressing E-cadherin | [ |
| Stress Response | Integrated stress response as a result of unfolded/misfolded proteins or the deprivation of nutrients | Compromises calcineurin expression and calcineurin-dependent PERK phosphorylation Upregulates ATF4 expression in STC2 transgenic mice | [ |
| Immune avoidance | Functions as a metagene Compromises the activity of IFN-γ-producing CD8 + Tc1 cells | Reduces the expression of immune-associated metagenes Modulates the immunomodulatory properties of mesenchymal stem cells | [ |
STC2 mediates tumour cells’ resistance to therapies
| Treatments | Tumours | Drug | Biological functions of STC2 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemotherapy | ||||
| Colorectal cancer | Bevacizumab (Anti-VEGF) | Promotes cell proliferation and migration due to reduced oxygen levels | [ | |
| Cervical cancer | Cisplatin | Promotes cell proliferation Facilitates the activation of MAPK signaling pathway | [ | |
| Colorectal cancer | Oxaliplatin | Compromises apoptosis Activates the PI3K-Akt signaling to upregulate P-glycoprotein | [ | |
| HCC | Paclitaxel | Upregulates the expression of pro-survival proteins like P-glycoprotein and Bcl-2 that enhance cell viability | [ | |
| Lung adenocarcinoma | EGFR TKI | Activates the Jun-Axl-Erk signaling to enhance cell survival | [ | |
| Radiotherapy | ||||
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | ‒ | Promotes colony formation Suppresses apoptosis Drives cell cycle progression from G1 to S phase Enhances migratory and invasive ability of tumour cells | [ | |