| Literature DB >> 36010607 |
Danijela Drakulic1, Marija Schwirtlich1, Isidora Petrovic1, Marija Mojsin1, Milena Milivojevic1, Natasa Kovacevic-Grujicic1, Milena Stevanovic1,2,3.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and highly lethal type of brain tumor, with poor survival despite advances in understanding its complexity. After current standard therapeutic treatment, including tumor resection, radiotherapy and concomitant chemotherapy with temozolomide, the median overall survival of patients with this type of tumor is less than 15 months. Thus, there is an urgent need for new insights into GBM molecular characteristics and progress in targeted therapy in order to improve clinical outcomes. The literature data revealed that a number of different signaling pathways are dysregulated in GBM. In this review, we intended to summarize and discuss current literature data and therapeutic modalities focused on targeting dysregulated signaling pathways in GBM. A better understanding of opportunities for targeting signaling pathways that influences malignant behavior of GBM cells might open the way for the development of novel GBM-targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: BMP signaling; GBM subtypes; Hippo signaling; Notch signaling; RA signaling; SHH signaling; TGFβ signaling; Wnt/β-catenin signaling; glioblastoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36010607 PMCID: PMC9406959 DOI: 10.3390/cells11162530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Stratification of GBM into subtypes. This summary is based on the previously reported publications listed in the main text and in Supplementary Table S1.
Figure 2The canonical activation of HH pathway and its pharmaceutical inhibitors. The activation of pathway occurs when HH ligand binds to PTCH at the cell membrane. In response to this binding, PTCH no longer inhibits SMO and initiates the downstream signaling, causing rapid dissociation of the SuFu–GLI complex and thus allowing GLI to enter the nucleus and regulate transcription of target genes. Proven pharmacological inhibitors that target SHH signaling components (SMO receptor or GLI transcription factors) are presented in red. References are included in the main text.
Molecules targeting Wnt/β-catenin cascade, mechanisms of action and effects on GBM cells and GSCs: A: Small molecules; B: Natural agents; and C: Repurposed drugs.
| Molecule | Modulation of Wnt | Effects on GBM Cells and GSCs Properties | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| A: Small molecules | |||
| ONC201 | inhibits expression of components of Wnt pathway and Wnt targets | induces apoptosis in GBM cells | [ |
| SEN461 | induces AXIN stabilization | inhibits anchorage-independent growth of human GBM cell lines and patient-derived primary tumor cells | [ |
| XAV939 | antagonist of tankyrase-enzymes involved in the degradation of AXIN | decreases the survival and clonogenicity of GBM cells | [ |
| LiCl | inhibits GSK3β | induces the expression of differentiation markers in GBM cells | [ |
| G007-LK | inhibitor of tankyrase-enzymes involved in the degradation of AXIN | decreases in vitro proliferation and sphere formation in primary GSC cultures | [ |
| IC261 | inhibitor of CK1 | inhibits growth of GBM cells and GSCs in vitro and induces growth inhibition of human GBM xenografts in mice | [ |
| LGK974 | inhibitor of porcupine proteins that modulate Wnt ligands | acts synergistically with TMZ to inhibit growth of GBM cells | [ |
| ICG-001 | CBP antagonist | reduces proliferation and survival of GBM cells | [ |
| AZD2858 | inhibits GSK-3β | reduces proliferation and survival of GBM cells | [ |
| B: Natural agents | |||
| shikonin | inhibits β-catenin phosphorylation | inhibits proliferation, migration and invasion of GBM cells | [ |
| Trichosanthin | inhibits expression of Wnt components | inhibits proliferation, invasion and migration and induces apoptosis of GBM cells | [ |
| decreases nuclear localization of β-catenin | inhibits proliferation and tumorsphere formation and promotes differentiation of GBM cells | [ | |
| resveratrol | decreases expression of Wnt signaling components and Wnt targets | inhibits proliferation, motility and invasion of GSCs | [ |
| carnosic acid | decreases expression of WISP1 | reduces GSC viability | [ |
| Indirubin | inhibitor of GSK-3β | reduces invasion of GBM and GSC-enriched neurospheres both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| DATS | decreases nuclear β-catenin level | inhibits cell growth, induces apoptosis and decreases migration and invasion in GBM cells | [ |
| Sulforaphane | inhibits Wnt/β-catenin signaling | enhances TMZ-induced apoptosis | [ |
| C: Repurposed drugs | |||
| NSAIDs | |||
| Niclosamide | decreases concentration of β-catenin in the nucleus | decreases cell viability, exerts antimigratory effects and inhibits the malignant potential of primary GBMs | [ |
| QUE | decreases phosphorylation of GSK3β | suppresses GSCs-initiated tumor growth in mouse models of gliomas | [ |
| Pioglitazone | inhibits β-catenin expression | reduces cell viability, suppresses invasion and induces apoptosis of GBM cells | [ |
LiCl, lithium chloride; DATS, garlic-derived diallyl trisulfide; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; QUE, Quetiapine.
Figure 3Overview of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling cascade, targets for potential therapeutic intervention in GBM and molecules investigated in preclinical and clinical studies (based on the data listed in Table 1). Mechanisms of modulation of Wnt/β-catenin activity in GBM (described in detail in Table 1) include (1) down-regulation of expression of Wnt components and Wnt targets, (2) promotion of β-catenin degradation, (3) increasing β-catenin stability, (4) inhibition of β-catenin nuclear translocation, (5) inhibition of β-catenin/CBP transcription complex, (6) down-regulation of WNT secretion and (7) inhibition of Wnt/β-catenin-WISP1 signaling. Small molecules are presented in blue letters, natural agents in orange and repurposed drugs in purple. Molecules in red boxes inhibit expression and activity of denoted Wnt component or processes within the Wnt cascade. Molecules in green increase activity of denoted components. Red circle represents phosphate group; yellow circle represents palmitoyl groups. Based on [120,130] and references included in the main text and the Table 1.
Figure 4Scheme of a canonical Notch signaling pathway and therapeutic targets. During transport through endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, Notch precursor is glycosylated, cleaved into a heterodimer (S1 cleavage) and transported to the cell membrane. Binding with Notch ligand induces second cleavage (S2 cleavage) by a member of ADAM family of proteases, leaving membrane-bound Notch extracellular truncation (NEXT) fragment. NEXT is subsequently cleaved by γ-secretase complex (S3 cleavage) releasing the active form of the Notch receptor, Notch intracellular domain (NICD), which can translocate to the nucleus, where it activates transcription of Notch target genes by forming transcriptional complex with DNA-binding protein CSL (also known as CBF1/in mammals, Suppressor of Hairless in Drosophila, and LAG-1 in C. elegans) and MAML, which further recruits other transcriptional coactivators (Co-A). Classes of inhibitors and antibodies (Abs, ADC) that target Notch pathway components are indicated. References are included in the main text.
Figure 5Schematic representation of the canonical (Smad-dependent) TGFβ pathway and TGFβ signaling therapies which have undergone clinical trials in GBM. TGFβ binding to TGFβ receptors II (TGFβRII) results in phosphorylation and activation of TGFβ receptors I (TGFβRI), phosphorylation of Smad 2/3, which interact with Smad 4 and form a complex that translocates into the nucleus to activate target genes. Antisense oligonucleotides (AP12009), anti-integrins, kinase inhibitors (LY2157299, LY2109761) or neutralizing antibodies (1D11, GC1008) used for targeting TGFβ signaling pathway are presented in red. Based on [274] and references included in the main text.
Figure 6Overview of the canonical BMP cell signaling pathway and molecules investigated for potential therapeutic intervention in GBM. In canonical pathway, various BMP ligands binds to two receptor types (type I and type II) to form a heterotetrameric complex, which then binds to and phosphorylates the receptor-activated Smad 1, Smad 5 and Smad 8. Extracellular inhibitors of BMPs including Noggin, Chordin, and Gremlin inhibit activity of this signaling pathway. Activated Smads (Smad 1, 5, and 8) form complexes with Smad 4, enter the cell nucleus and in combination with co-binding partners, such as p300 or STAT, act as transcription factors and activate multiple gene expression. BMP ligands that activate BMP signaling in the GBM and GSCs are in the green boxes. Receptor inhibitors that suppress BMP signaling in the GBM and GSCs are in the red boxes. DMH1 targets BMP type 1 receptors, JL5 inhibits both the type 1 and type 2 BMP receptors. Ym155 does not bind to the BMP receptors but induces the degradation of BMPR2. References are included in the main text.
Figure 7The canonical Hippo pathway and its pharmaceutical inhibitors. Various extracellular signals including mechanical stress, cellular contact, hormones and growth factors activates Hippo signaling cascades that through serial phosphorylations involving block of kinases inhibits nuclear translocation of transcriptional co-activator YAP/TAZ and consequently their involvement in the regulation of gene transcription. When Hippo pathway is inactive, YAP/TAZ translocates to the nucleus, associates with TEAD family of transcription factors and participates in the regulation of target genes expression. Inhibitors that target important pathway components are indicated in red. References are included in the main text.
Figure 8Overview of RA signaling pathway and RAR/RXR agonists and RAMBAs. In the bloodstream, retinol forms complex with RBP4 and enters the cells via STRA6 or by membrane diffusion. Within cells, retinol is converted to retinaldehyde by ADHs and RDHs and subsequently oxidized to RA by ALDH1A1-3. Three naturally occurring RA stereoisomers are ATRA, 13-cis RA and 9-cis RA. RA enters the nucleus via CRABP2, where it interacts with RAR/RXR heterodimer forming a complex that binds to RARE in the promoter regions of RA target genes. RA is inactivated by CYP26 oxidase (modified based on [380]). Summary of inhibitors of the CYP26A1 enzyme (RAMBAs) and RARs/RXRs agonists is made based on [383] and https://resources.tocris.com/pdfs/literature/reviews/retinoid-receptors-review-2019-web.pdf (accessed on 23 May 2022), respectively. RAR and RXR agonists and RAMBAs used for treatment of GBM cells in vitro or in vivo are presented in green letters, and RAR and RXR agonists and RAMBAs used in clinical trials for GBMs are presented in blue letters, while RAR and RXR agonists and RAMBAs not yet used in treatment of GBM are presented in black letters (based on results of previously reported publications included in the main text and results obtained by [385,386,387,388,389,390]).