| Literature DB >> 35508480 |
Qiong Li1,2, Chanqi Ye1,2, Tian Tian1,2, Qi Jiang1,2, Peng Zhao1,2, Xiaoting Wang1,2, Feiye Liu3, Jianzhen Shan1,2, Jian Ruan4,5.
Abstract
As a critical member of the ubiquitin-specific proteolytic enzyme family, ubiquitin-specific peptidase 20 (USP20) regulates the stability of proteins via multiple signaling pathways. In addition, USP20 upregulation is associated with various cellular biological processes, such as cell cycle progression, proliferation, migration, and invasion. Emerging studies have revealed the pivotal role of USP20 in the tumorigenesis of various cancer types, such as breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, gastric cancer and adult T cell leukemia. In our review, we highlight the different mechanisms of USP20 in various tumor types and demonstrate that USP20 regulates the stability of multiple proteins. Therefore, regulating the activity of USP20 is a novel tumor treatment. However, the clinical significance of USP20 in cancer treatment merits more evidence. Finally, different prospects exist for the continued research focus of USP20.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35508480 PMCID: PMC9068925 DOI: 10.1038/s41419-022-04853-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 9.685
Fig. 1The ubiquitin–proteasome system cascade and the classification of deubiquitylase family.
A Diagrammatic of key events in ubiquitylation and deubiquitylation. The E1 enzyme activates and combines with ubiquitin moiety in an ATP-dependent manner. Then the ubiquitin moiety is transferred to an E2 conjugating enzyme, Finally, ubiquitin is transferred directly from E2 enzyme to substrate protein by E3 ligase, on the one hand, the labeled protein is degraded by the 26s proteasome. Or the DUBs stabilize the targeted protein by removing the ubiquitin moiety, the ubiquitin becomes free ubiquitin to reuse. B The reported subclass of DUBs including ubiquitin-specific proteases (USPs), ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolases (UCHs), ovarian tumor proteases (OTUs), JAMMs (also known as MPN+), MJDs (also known as Josephins), and the two new families: MINDY family and the ZUP1 family.
Other DUBs and cancer.
| DUB | Cancer type | Tumorigenesis | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| USP1 | Osteosarcoma | Promotes the invasion of osteosarcoma cells | [ |
| Glioma | USP1 stabilizes EZH2 to activate β-catenin to drive glioma tumorigenesis | [ | |
| Breast cancer | Regulates metastasis | [ | |
| USP2 | Breast cancer | Promotes cell migration and invasion | [ |
| USP4 | Breast cancer | Promotes invasion | [ |
| Melanoma | May be an oncogene | [ | |
| Glioblastoma | Promotes glioblastoma multiforme | [ | |
| Facilitates chemoresistance | [ | ||
| USP5 | Pancreatic cancer | Promotes tumorigenesis and progression | [ |
| Non-small cell lung cancer | Upregulation of USP5 contributes to tumorigenesis | [ | |
| Colorectal cancer | Promotes cell growth and resistance to chemotherapeutics | [ | |
| USP7 | Medulloblastoma | Promotes medulloblastoma cell survival and metastasis | [ |
| Breast cancer | Promotes breast carcinogenesis via stabilizing PHF8 | [ | |
| Osteosarcoma | Promotes metastasis by inducing EMT | [ | |
| Lung cancer | Modulates the antitumor immune response | [ | |
| USP8 | Cervical cancer | Associated with a poor prognosis in cervical squamous cell carcinoma patients | [ |
| Suppresses apoptosis by stabilizing FLIPL | [ | ||
| USP10 | Colon cancer | Promotes tumor proliferation | [ |
| Lung cancer | Inhibits cell proliferation, invasion and cell growth | [ | |
| The USP10-HDAC6 confers cisplatin resistance | [ | ||
| Liver cancer | Promotes cell proliferation by stabilizing YAP/TAZ | [ | |
| Promotes metastasis by stabilizing Smad4 | [ | ||
| Inhibits p53 Signaling and constricts poor outcome | [ | ||
| Acute myeloid leukemia | Stabilizes oncogenic FLT3 | [ | |
| USP11 | Colorectal cancer | Promotes growth and metastasis | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | Promotes EMT by stabilizing Snail | [ | |
| USP13 | Non-small cell lung cancer | Promotes tumor progression | [ |
| USP14 | Breast cancer | Regulates cell cycle progression and cell proliferation and metastasis | [ |
| Enhances sensitivity to enzalutamide | [ | ||
| USP30 | Liver cancer | Stabilizes DRP1 to promote hepatocarcinogenesis | [ |
| UCHL1 | Gastric cancer | Promotes metastasis | [ |
| OTUB2 | Non-small cell lung cancer | Promotes tumorigenesis | [ |
Fig. 2The structure of USP20 and the function of each domain of USP20.
USP20 contains three different domains, including ZNF-UBP, USP, and DUSP domain. Those different domains of USP20 play crucial roles in different biological processes.
Fig. 3The mechanism of deubiquitinating enzyme USP20 in cancer.
USP20 regulates cell proliferation, migration, invasion, metastasis, and tumor growth by participating in multiple signaling pathways in various cancer types.
Other representative inhibitors of DUBs.
| DUB inhibitor | Target | Structure | Stage of development | IC50 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SJB3-019A | USP1 | Preclinical | 78.1 nM | [ | |
| ML323 | USP1 | Preclinical | 76 nM | [ | |
| ML364 | USP2 | Preclinical | 1.1 μM | [ | |
| P5091 | USP7 | Preclinical | 4.2 μM | [ | |
| FT671 | USP7 | Preclinical | 52 nM | [ | |
| GNE-6776 | USP7 | Preclinical | N.A. | [ | |
| DUBs-IN-1 | USP8 | Preclinical | 0.24 μM | [ | |
| Spautin1 | USP13 and USP10 | Preclinical | 0.6–0.7 μM | [ | |
| Mitoxantrone | USP11 | Preclinical | 8.5 μM | [ | |
| IU1 | USP14 | Preclinical | 4–5 μM | [ | |
| IU1-47 | USP14 | Preclinical | 0.6 μM | [ | |
| IU1-248 | USP14 | Preclinical | 0.83 μM | [ | |
| PR619 | Broad range DUB inhibitor | Preclinical | [ | ||
| 1,10-Phenanthroline | JAMM type Isopeptidase | Preclinical | [ | ||
| VLX1570 | USP14 and UCHL5 | Clinical trial phase (now suspended) | 10 μM | [ | |
| GSK2643943A | USP20/Ub-Rho | Preclinical | 160 nM | [ |
Fig. 4The structure of GSK2643943A.
The structure of GSK2643943A, one small molecule inhibitor for USP20/Ub-Rho.