| Literature DB >> 35965326 |
Nisa Syakila A Rahman1, Syazalina Zahari1, Saiful Effendi Syafruddin1, Mohd Firdaus-Raih2, Teck Yew Low1, M Aiman Mohtar3.
Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a multi-layered organelle that is essential for the synthesis, folding, and structural maturation of almost one-third of the cellular proteome. It houses several resident proteins for these functions including the 21 members of the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) family. The signature of proteins belonging to this family is the presence of the thioredoxin domain which mediates the formation, and rearrangement of disulfide bonds of substrate proteins in the ER. This process is crucial not only for the proper folding of ER substrates but also for maintaining a balanced ER proteostasis. The inclusion of new PDI members with a wide variety of structural determinants, size and enzymatic activity has brought additional epitomes of how PDI functions. Notably, some of them do not carry the thioredoxin domain and others have roles outside the ER. This also reflects that PDIs may have specialized functions and their functions are not limited within the ER. Large-scale expression datasets of human clinical samples have identified that the expression of PDI members is elevated in pathophysiological states like cancer. Subsequent functional interrogations using structural, molecular, cellular, and animal models suggest that some PDI members support the survival, progression, and metastasis of several cancer types. Herein, we review recent research advances on PDIs, vis-à-vis their expression, functions, and molecular mechanisms in supporting cancer growth with special emphasis on the anterior gradient (AGR) subfamily. Last, we posit the relevance and therapeutic strategies in targeting the PDIs in cancer.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35965326 PMCID: PMC9375924 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-022-00868-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 9.584
The human PDI family members
| Gene name | Protein name | Aliases | Uniprot ID | Chromosome | PDB code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P4HB | PDI | PDIA1, PROHB, DSI, GIT, PDI, PO4HB, P4Hbeta | P07237 | 17q25.3 | 3bj5, 4ju5, 3uem, 6i7s, 4ekz, 4el1, 1x5c, 2bjx, 1bjx, 1mek, 2k18 |
| PDIA2 | PDIA2 | PDIA2, PDI, PDIR | Q13087 | 16p13.3 | None |
| PDIA3 | PDIA3 | P58, ERp61, ERp57, ERp60, GRP57, PI-PLC, HsT17083 | P30101 | 15q15.3 | 2h8l, 2alb, 3f8u, 2dmm, 6eny |
| PDIA4 | PDIA4 | ERP70, ERP72 | P13667 | 7q36.1 | 3idv |
| PDIA5 | PDIA5 | PDIR, FLJ30401 | Q14554 | 3q21.1 | 4i6x |
| PDIA6 | PDIA6 | P5, ERp5 | Q15084 | 2p25.1 | 4ef0, 3vww, 4gwr, 3w8j, 1x5d |
| PDILT | PDILT | PDIA7 | Q8N807 | 16p12.3 | 5xf7, 4nwy |
| ERP27 | ERP27 | FLJ32115, PDIA8 | Q96DN0 | 12p12.3 | 4f9z, 2l4c |
| ERP29 | ERP29 | ERp28, ERp31,PDI-DB, PDIA9 | P30040 | 12q24.13 | none |
| ERP44 | ERP44 | KIAA0573, PDIA10 | Q9BS26 | 9q31.1 | none |
| TMX1 | TMX1 | TMX, PDIA11 | Q9H3N1 | 14q22.1 | 1x5e |
| TMX2 | TMX2 | PDIA12 | Q9Y320 | 11q12.1 | 2dj0 |
| TMX3 | TMX3 | FLJ20793, KIAA1830, PDIA13 | Q96JJ7 | 18q22.1 | none |
| TMX4 | TMX4 | DJ971N18.2, KIAA1162, PDIA14 | Q9H1E5 | 20p12.3 | none |
| TXNDC5 | TXNDC5 | MGC3178, FLJ21353, FLJ90810, EndoPDI, Hcc-2, ERp46, PDIA15 | Q8NBS9 | 6p24.3 | 3wgx, 3wge, 3uvt, 3wgd, 3uj1, 2diz |
| TXNDC12 | TXNDC12 | TLP19, ERP18, ERP19, hAG-1, AGR1, PDIA16 | O95881 | 1p32.3 | 1sen, 2k8v |
| AGR2 | AGR2 | XAG-2, HAG-2, AG2, PDIA17 | O95994 | 7p21.1 | 2lns, 2lnt |
| AGR3 | AGR3 | HAG3, hAG-3, BCMP11, PDIA18 | Q8TD06 | 7p21.1 | 3ph9 |
| DNAJC10 | DNAJC10 | ERdj5, PDIA19 | Q8IXB1 | 2q32.1 | none |
| CASQ1 | CASQ1 | PDIB1 | P31415 | 1q23.2 | 5crg, 5crd, 5crh, 3uom, 5cre |
| CASQ2 | CASQ2 | PDIB2 | O14958 | 1p13.1 | 6owv, 6oww, 2vaf |
Fig. 1Domain representation of PDI family members and family tree. A Schematic representation highlighting the a- and b-type domain arrangements, transmembrane domain (TM), and ER retention motifs of all 21 PDI family members. B Protein sequences of all 21 PDI family members were aligned using Clustal Omega and the corresponding matrix represented as a circular tree using the iTOL website (http://itol.embl.de/)
Fig. 2The 3D structure of full-length human PDI/PDIA1 as predicted by AlphaFold (ID:AF-P07237-F1). The major domains are represented by different color surfaces. The active site containing the TRX motif, CGHC is colored in red
Fig. 3Expression of PDI members in cancer landscape. The expression of PDIs is based on RNA-seq expression data extracted from the TCGA Pan Cancer Atlas
Small molecule PDI inhibitors
| Name | IC50 (micromolar) | Selectivity | Reversibility | PDI inhibition activity | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In-vitro | In-vivo | ||||||
| 10 (in pH 6.3) | Nonspecific | Irreversible | N/A | N/A | [ | ||
| 90 | Nonspecific | Irreversible | •Apoptosis increased together with other drugs in melanoma cells | The neuroprotective effect of 4-HBA was nullified | [ | ||
| 590 | •Glioma cell progression and invasion were reduced | [ | |||||
| 1050 | •Inhibits virus entry | [ | |||||
| 20 | •Inhibits platelet accumulation | [ | |||||
| 40 | •Aggregation of Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase increases •Inhibits VKORC1 activity •Transcriptional activity of NF-kB increases •Inhibits NADPH oxidase activity •Inhibits diphtheria toxin cytotoxicity •Inhibits thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor shedding | [ | |||||
| 0.3–2.1 | b′ domain of PDIA1 | Reversible | •Prevent adhesion of MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells to collagen, endothelium and fibronectin •Reduce cancer cell trans-endothelial migration | Impair platelet aggregation | [ | ||
| 66 | Nonspecific | Irreversible | •Prevents polyQ-induced apoptosis in a PC12 cell model of Huntington’s Disease | [ | |||
| 100 | Nonspecific | Irreversible | •Inhibits diphtheria toxin activation •Prevents H9 cells from HIV-1 infection (IC50 = 0.3 mM) •Long-term host cell protection at the late stages of the viral cycle | [ | |||
| At 1 micromolar > 30% inhibition | Nonspecific | Reversible | [ | ||||
| 8 (in pH 6) | Nonspecific | Irreversible | [ | ||||
| 0.156–3 | PDIA3 and PDIA4 | Reversible | •Inhibits PDI-catalyzed reduction of HIV gp120 and viral entry •Cytotoxic in HeLa, HepG2, HT1080 and K562 cells | [ | |||
| 8 | Nonspecific | Irreversible | [ | ||||
| 10 | Shows selectivity for Cys53 of a′ domain | Irreversible | •Cytotoxic in ovarian cancer cell lines (OVCAR-8, NCI/ADR-RES, HEY and OVCAR-3) | Accumulates in tumour and suppresses tumour growth in a mouse xenograft model of ovarian cancer; no significant toxicity towards normal tissues | [ | ||
| 85 | Low specificity reaction with CXXC motif | Irreversible | •Induces rapid shedding of L-selectin from isolated neutrophils •Inhibits PDI-catalyzed reductive release of acid-soluble [125I] tyramine-SH from surface-bound [125I] tyramine-SS-poly(D-lysine) (IC50 = 10 micromolar) •Effective before or during HIV-1 infection •Non-effective after infection progressed in P4, PM1, H9, 1G5 and macrophage-depleted peripheral blood monocytic cells | [ | |||
| 6.1 | PDIA3, PDIA4, PDIA6, thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase | Reversible | •Inhibits platelet aggregation and endothelial cell-mediated fibrin generation | Inhibits thrombus formation | [ | ||
| 9.2 | Plasma PDI | Reversible | •Increased plasma PDI inhibitory activity •Decreases thrombin production | [ | |||
| 40 | Irreversible | •Cytotoxic in HeLa cells with EC50 = 23.9 micromolar | [ | ||||
| Sufficient inhibition of PDI with a molar ratio of 100:1 (Kd = 3.19 × 10–4 M) | Nonspecific | Reversible | [ | ||||
| 23 | Nonspecific | Irreversible | •Prevents polyQ-induced apoptosis in a PC12 cell model of Huntington’s Disease | [ | |||
| 63 | Irreversible | •Inhibits apoptosis in a PC12 cell model of Huntington's Disease | Prevents neurotoxicity in medium spiny neurons in the striatal region of brain slices | [ | |||
| 1.9–25.9 | PDIA1, PDIA3, PDIA4, TXNDC5, PDIA6 | •Inhibit tumor cell growth and T cell tumor control | Improved survival and enhanced the activity of bortezomib in multiple mywloma | [ | |||
| < 5 | PDIA1 | •Induces apoptosis in myeloma cells | [ | ||||
Approved and investigational drugs targeting PDIs
| Target | Drug name |
|---|---|
| PDIA1 | Ribostamycin, copper, zinc, artenimol, zinc acetate, zinc chloride, zinc sulfate |
| CASQ1 | Calcium citrate, calcium levulinate, calcium phosphate, calcium phosphate dihydrate |
| PDIA3 | Copper, zinc, zinc acetate, zinc chloride, zinc sulfate |
| CASQ2 | Calcium citrate, calcium phosphate, calcium phosphate dihydrate |
Fig. 4Emerging roles of PDI protein family in cancer. Schematic representation summarizing the existing and emerging roles of PDI proteins in cancer. Although PDI proteins are crucial for ER function and integrity in normal cell physiology, in cancer cells however, PDI proteins can be translocated into different sub-cellular localizations such as the cytosol, cell surface and extracellular milieu. Existing data showed that these non-ER localizations of PDI proteins gain new functions in supporting cancer growth suggesting that the roles of PDI proteins go beyond the ER in diseased state like cancer