| Literature DB >> 36187394 |
Alya R Alnuaimi1,2, Vidhya A Nair1, Lara J Bou Malhab1, Eman Abu-Gharbieh1,3, Anu Vinod Ranade1,4, Gianfranco Pintus1,5,6, Mohamad Hamad1,5, Hauke Busch7, Jutta Kirfel8, Rifat Hamoudi1,3,9, Wael M Abdel-Rahman1,10.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a devastating disease, mainly because of metastasis. As a result, there is a need to better understand the molecular basis of invasion and metastasis and to identify new biomarkers and therapeutic targets to aid in managing these tumors. The actin cytoskeleton and actin-binding proteins are known to play an important role in the process of cancer metastasis because they control and execute essential steps in cell motility and contractility as well as cell division. Caldesmon (CaD) is an actin-binding protein encoded by the CALD1 gene as multiple transcripts that mainly encode two protein isoforms: High-molecular-weight CaD, expressed in smooth muscle, and low-molecular weight CaD (l-CaD), expressed in nonsmooth muscle cells. According to our comprehensive review of the literature, CaD, particularly l-CaD, plays a key role in the development, metastasis, and resistance to chemoradiotherapy in colorectal, breast, and urinary bladder cancers and gliomas, among other malignancies. CaD is involved in many aspects of the carcinogenic hallmarks, including epithelial mesenchymal transition via transforming growth factor-beta signaling, angiogenesis, resistance to hormonal therapy, and immune evasion. Recent data show that CaD is expressed in tumor cells as well as in stromal cells, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts, where it modulates the tumor microenvironment to favor the tumor. Interestingly, CaD undergoes selective tumor-specific splicing, and the resulting isoforms are generally not expressed in normal tissues, making these transcripts ideal targets for drug design. In this review, we will analyze these features of CaD with a focus on CRC and show how the currently available data qualify CaD as a potential candidate for targeted therapy in addition to its role in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder cancer; CALD1; Caldesmon; Chemoresistance; Colorectal cancer; Epithelial to mesenchymal transition; Gastric cancer; Glioma; Invasion; Metastasis
Year: 2022 PMID: 36187394 PMCID: PMC9516648 DOI: 10.4251/wjgo.v14.i9.1637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Oncol
Figure 1The domain structures of high-molecular-weight caldesmon and low-molecular-weight caldesmon. Human caldesmon (CaD) has two major isoforms resulting from alternative splicing. The upper bar represents high-molecular-weight CaD (h-CaD) (793 aa), the full length protein, which contains an N-terminal domain (NH2), a C-terminal domain, and a middle part (repeating domain). The lower bar represents low-molecular-weight CaD (l-CaD) (538 aa), which is missing the middle repeating region. All functional domains are shared between h-CaD and l-CaD, except the missing central spacer in l-CaD that separates the N-terminal myosin binding domain from the C-terminal actin binding domain. Common functional regions for myosin and calmodulin are located within the NH2 terminal. The calmodulin binding site is also located in the C-terminal region. Tropomyosin and actin binding sites are found in the C-terminal region. Phosphorylation sites are shown and the shared phosphorylation sites for ERK and cdc2 are highlighted (yellow). h-CaD: High-molecular-weight caldesmon; l-CaD: Low-molecular weight caldesmon; NH2: N-terminal domain; COOH: C-terminal domain.
Summary of the literature supporting an oncogenic role of caldesmon
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| 1 | Colorectal cancer | L-CaD was expressed in colorectal cancer and liver metastasis, compared with normal tissue. L-CaD was associated with a poor response to chemotherapy. L-CaD was associated with resistance to 5-Fu treatment and caused an increase in p21 and cleaved-PARP and a decrease in the expression of NF-κB and p-mTOR | Clinical, functional | Kim |
| 2 | Colon, bladder, and prostate | CALD1 may indicate cancer-related splicing events. CALD1 was identified as a tumor-specific splicing variant in colon and urinary bladder cancer tissue samples | Bioinformatics, and experimental | Thorsen |
| 3 | Colorectal cancer | CALD1 was upregulated and associated with M2 macrophage infiltration, angiogenesis, and TGF-β in stage III/IV mismatch-proficient colorectal cancer. High expression of CALD1 was significantly correlated with transendothelial migration. Cancer cell proliferation, invasion, and migration abilities were suppressed after reducing CALD1 expression | Clinical, bioinformatics, functional | Zheng |
| 4 | Colorectal cancer-early-onset | CALD overexpressed in early-onset colorectal cancer | Bioinformatics, | Zhao |
| 5 | Rectal cancer | CALD1 overexpressed in nonresponders to chemotherapy | Clinical | Chauvin |
| 6 | Colorectal cancer | Novel l-CaD isoforms produced by alternative splicing of CALD1 played a role in colorectal cancer metastasis | Bioinformatics, | Lian |
| 7 | Gastric cancer | CALD1 is a novel target of TEA domain family member 4 that is involved in cell proliferation and migration | Bioinformatics, | Lim |
| 8 | Gastric cancer | High expression of CALD1 is associated with poor overall survival and with immune infiltration in gastric cancer | Bioinformatics, | Liu |
| 9 | Breast cancer, study of ER | Silencing of ER in MCF7 cells upregulated CALD1, concomitantly with the acquisition of a new phenotype that encompasses increased growth rates, loss of cell-to-cell adhesion and a redistribution of the cytoskeletal components, resulting in increased motility | Functional analysis, basic study | Al Saleh |
| 10 | Breast cancer-ER-positive | ANXA1 and CALD1 were associated with downregulation of ER via activation of NF-κB signaling, which blocks apoptosis and allows cancer cells to become independent of estrogen. ANXA1 and CALD1 proteins are independent markers for tamoxifen therapy outcome (resistance) and are associated with fast tumor progression | Clinical, association, pathway analysis | De Marchi |
| 11 | Normal mouse mammary cells | The expression level and phosphorylation state of CaD increase as a function of time after induction of EMT by TGF-β1, and these changes in CaD correlate with increased focal adhesion number and size and increased cell contractility | Functional analysis, basic study | Nalluri |
| 12 | Bladder cancer | L-CaD overexpression in primary nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer is significantly associated with tumor progression. L-CaD is implicated in increased cell motility and invasive characteristics through morphological changes in bladder cancer cells | Clinical, functional | Lee |
| 13 | Bladder cancer | CaD was identified as one of the proteins with significant differential expression between bladder cancer tissue and normal urothelial tissue, using antibody microarray profiling of tissue samples | Clinical | Lee |
| 14 | Bladder cancer | Low CALD1 in tumor is associated with a good prognosis | Bioinformatics, | Liu |
| 15 | Bladder cancer | CALD1 was correlated with aggressive features and poor overall survival. CALD1 promotes tumor cell growth, migration, invasion, and the cell cycle; it inhibits tumor cell apoptosis | Clinical, functional | Li |
| 16 | Bladder cancer | CALD1 was overexpressed in CAFs, as well as macrophages and T cells in the microenvironment of bladder tumors and was associated with oncogenic features | Bioinformatics, functional | Du |
| 17 | Bladder cancer | MIR100HG inhibits the expression of miR-142-5p, resulting in the upregulation of CALD1 and acquisition of aggressive features in bladder cancer | Clinical, bioinformatics, functional | Zhang et al[ |
| 18 | Lung cancer | CaD is overexpressed in brain metastases of lung cancer | Clinical, expression | Zhang |
| 19 | NSCLC | Activation of the anaphase-promoting complex by p53 induces a state of dormancy in NSCLC cells after 5-Fu. Subsequently, EMT and CaD upregulation were associated with dormant cancer stem cells | Experimental, functional | Dai |
| 20 | Squamous cell carcinoma of oral cavity | CaD expression is associated with a poor prognosis in patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma. CaD increased invasion and migration and was elevated in patients’ serum | Clinical, functional | Chang |
| 21 | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells secreted nitric oxide in the nasopharyngeal carcinoma tumor environment, which resulted in translocation of CaD to the podosome in a Ca2+/calmodulin manner in tumor cells and promotion of their invasion and metastatic ability | Functional | Zhang et al[ |
| 22 | Glioma | CALD1 was upregulated in neoplastic cells. CALD1 was associated with a progressive vessel architecture. CALD1 may serve as marker of glioma progression | Clinical, functional | Cheng |
| 23 | Glioma, patients’ serum | The serum level of l-CaD was significantly higher in the group of glioma patients as compared to any of the other brain tumor groups | Clinical | Zheng |
| 24 | Glioma-associated blood vessels | Splicing variants of CALD1 are differentially expressed in glioma neovascularization | Expression, functional | Zheng |
| 25 | Endothelial cells | L-CaD is involved in the migration of endothelial cells and/or endothelial progenitor cells into human neoplasms (gliomas, breast cancers, renal cell carcinomas) where they contribute to tumor angiogenesis | Expression, functional | Zheng |
| 26 | Kidney epithelial cells, mouse mammary cells | CaD is activated and upregulated upon TGF-β induction of EMT. CALD1 overexpression is a key component in TGF-β-driven EMT | Functional | Morita |
| 27 | Not specified | CaD maintains newly polymerized actin in a distinct state that has a higher affinity for the Arp2/3 complex | Functional | Jensen |
h-CaD: High-molecular-weight caldesmon; l-CaD: Low-molecular weight caldesmon; EMT: Epithelial to mesenchymal transition; TGF: Transforming growth factor; CaD: Caldesmon; NSCLC: Non-small-cell lung cancer; 5-Fu: 5-fluorouracil; CAFs: Cancer-associated fibroblasts; JAK/STAT: Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription; PD-L1: Programmed death ligand 1; NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa B; p-mTOR: Phosphorylated mammalian target of rapamycin; ER: Estrogen receptor.
Summary of the literature supporting a tumor suppressor role of caldesmon
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| 1 | Colorectal cancer | An alternatively spliced form of CALD1 was decreased in tissues from colorectal tumor as compared to adjacent normal tissues | Bioinformatics, | Liu |
| 2 | Gastric cancer | CaD is decreased in metastasis-derived gastric cancer cell lines. Knockdown of CaD resulted in an increase in cell migration and invasion | Proteomics, clinical, functional | Hou |
| 3 | Breast, colorectal, and thyroid cancer cells | The ectopic expression of l-CaD reduced the number of podosomes/invadopodia and suppressed cell invasion | Basic, functional | Yoshio |
| 4 | Breast cancer, and rat aorta cell lines | PKGI-β enhances breast cancer cell motility and invasive capacity by phosphorylating CaD. Knockdown of endogenous CaD in MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells had pro-migratory and pro-invasive effects | Basic, functional | Schwappacher |
| 5 | Prostate cancer | Leupaxin phosphorylates CaD leading to its downregulation, and this downregulation of CaD increased migration and invasion of prostate cancer cells | Basic experimental | Dierks |
| 6 | Vascular smooth muscle cells and NIH 3T3 fibroblast cells | CaD upregulation mediates p53 suppression of Src-induced podosome and rosette formation and cellular invasiveness. The study is based on normal cells and whether or not it applies to malignancy remains to be clarified | Basic, functional | Mukhopadhyay |
PKGI-β: cGMP-dependent protein kinase I; CaD: Caldesmon; l-CaD: Low-molecular weight caldesmon.
Figure 2Caldesmon and resistance to various modalities of cancer therapy. INF: Interferon; JAK/STAT: Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription; PD-L1: Programmed death ligand 1; PD-1: Programmed death 1; 5-Fu: 5-fluorouracil; TGF: Transforming growth factor; ER: Estrogen receptor; NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa B.
Figure 3Role of caldesmon in colorectal cancer. Dashed lines indicate reported associations, the mechanism of which has not been identified. CRC: Colorectal cancer; NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa B; BCL-2: B cell lymphoma; TNF: Tumor necrosis factor; IL: Interleukin; VEGF: Vascular endothelial growth factor; TGF: Transforming growth factor; p-mTOR: Phosphorylated mammalian target of rapamycin; EMT: Epithelial to mesenchymal transition; CaD: Caldesmon.