| Literature DB >> 35614494 |
Mohsen Karami Fath1, Nastaran Karimfar2, Andarz Fazlollahpour Naghibi3, Shahriyar Shafa4, Melika Ghasemi Shiran5, Mehran Ataei6, Hossein Dehghanzadeh7, Mohsen Nabi Afjadi8, Tahereh Ghadiri9,10,11, Zahra Payandeh12, Vahideh Tarhriz13.
Abstract
Cancer can be induced by a variety of possible causes, including tumor suppressor gene failure and proto-oncogene hyperactivation. Tumor-associated extrachromosomal circular DNA has been proposed to endanger human health and speed up the progression of cancer. The amplification of ecDNA has raised the oncogene copy number in numerous malignancies according to whole-genome sequencing on distinct cancer types. The unusual structure and function of ecDNA, and its potential role in understanding current cancer genome maps, make it a hotspot to study tumor pathogenesis and evolution. The discovery of the basic mechanisms of ecDNA in the emergence and growth of malignancies could lead researchers to develop new cancer therapies. Despite recent progress, different aspects of ecDNA require more investigation. We focused on the features, and analyzed the bio-genesis, and origin of ecDNA in this review, as well as its functions in neuroblastoma and glioma cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Amplification; Cancer; Drug resistance; Extrachromosomal circular DNA; Oncogene
Year: 2022 PMID: 35614494 PMCID: PMC9131661 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-022-02617-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 6.429
Fig. 1Biogenesis and genesis of ecDNA (up) role of ecDNA in cancer
Characteristics of ecDNA
| Abbreviation name | Number of strand(s) | Size | Origination | Sequence feature | Cancer association machanism | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extrachromosomal small circular DNA | eccDNA | Single or double | < 1 Mb. invisible under microscope | Telomere circle, spcDNA, miDNA, episome | Small regulatory RNA | tumurgenic through selective teleomeric extension, modifying geneome stability | [ |
| Extrachromosomal DNA (double minutes) | ecDNA | Double | 1–3 Mb, visible under microscope | BFB cycle, translocation/deletion amplification, episome and chromothripsis | Oncogene amplification, regulatory regions, no centromeres or telomeres | Oncogene amplification, chromosome, rearrangement Gene fusions, epigenetic/Histone, modification, nucleosome accessibility, signaling pathways regulation intra-tumoral heterogeneity autophagy, metastasis and invasiveness, senescence antitumor immunity | [ |
Different oncogenes present on ecDNA and their functions
| Cancer type | Associated gene(s) on ecDNA | Function | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glioblastoma | Increasing tumor invasiveness, radiation resistance, and drug resistance by upregulating a variety of oncogenes. In some cases, EGFRvIII and MDM2 amplification leads to Erlotinib resistance | [ | |
| Colon | Silencing BRCA1 gene decreased the number of DM-amplified oncogenes and the number of DM copies in ecDNA by down-regulating DHFR. In addition, MTX-resistant cells containing DM increased susceptibility to MTX | [ | |
| Neuroblastoma | The chromosomal genome needs to be remodeled, amplified, TERT stimulated, DCLK1 inhibited, and the presence of MYCN eliminated on ecDNA to increase HU sensitivity | [ | |
| Cervical | Promoting MTX resistance by | [ | |
| Ovarian | Decreased levels of ecDNA-form | [ | |
| Breast | Induced resistance to MTX by DM-form amplified DHFR is not affected by the loss of HER2 on ecDNA and trastuzamab therapy | [ | |
| Leukemia | Drug sensitivity ptomotion by down-regulating the | [ | |
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma | Enhancing HU sensitivity by Loss of | [ |
Fig. 2Important oncogene in ecDNA in glioblastoma [2]