Lin Kimberly, Baritaki Stavroula, Militello Loredana, Malaponte Graziella, Bevelacqua Ylenia, Bonavida Benjamin
Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Molecular Genetics, David Geffen School of Medicine, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Genes Cancer. 2010 May;1(5):409-420. doi: 10.1177/1947601910373795.
Melanoma is a highly metastatic cancer, and there are no current therapeutic modalities to treat this deadly malignant disease once it has metastasized. Melanoma cancers exhibit B-RAF mutations in up to 70% of cases. B-RAF mutations are responsible, in large part, for the constitutive hyperactivation of survival/antiapoptotic pathways such as the MAPK, NF-κB, and PI3K/AKT. These hyperactivated pathways regulate the expression of genes targeting the initiation of the metastatic cascade, namely, the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). EMT is the result of the expression of mesenchymal gene products such as fibronectin, vimentin, and metalloproteinases and the invasion and inhibition of E-cadherin. The above pathways cross-talk and regulate each other's activities and functions. For instance, the NF-κB pathway directly regulates EMT through the transcription of gene products involved in EMT and indirectly through the transcriptional up-regulation of the metastasis inducer Snail. Snail, in turn, suppresses the expression of the metastasis suppressor gene product Raf kinase inhibitor protein RKIP (inhibits the MAPK and the NF-κB pathways) as well as PTEN (inhibits the PI3K/AKT pathway). The role of B-RAF mutations in melanoma and their direct role in the induction of EMT are not clear. This review discusses the hypothesis that B-RAF mutations are involved in the dysregulation of the NF-κB/Snail/RKIP/PTEN circuit and in both the induction of EMT and metastasis. The therapeutic implications of the dysregulation of the above circuit by B-RAF mutations are such that they offer novel targets for therapeutic interventions in the treatment of EMT and metastasis.
黑色素瘤是一种具有高度转移性的癌症,一旦发生转移,目前尚无治疗这种致命恶性疾病的有效方法。高达70%的黑色素瘤病例存在B-RAF基因突变。B-RAF突变在很大程度上导致了生存/抗凋亡信号通路(如MAPK、NF-κB和PI3K/AKT)的持续性过度激活。这些过度激活的信号通路调控着针对转移级联反应起始阶段的基因表达,即上皮-间质转化(EMT)。EMT是由诸如纤连蛋白、波形蛋白和金属蛋白酶等间质基因产物的表达以及E-钙黏蛋白的侵袭和抑制所导致的结果。上述信号通路相互作用并调节彼此的活性和功能。例如,NF-κB信号通路通过EMT相关基因产物的转录直接调节EMT,并通过转移诱导因子Snail的转录上调间接调节EMT。反过来,Snail抑制转移抑制基因产物Raf激酶抑制蛋白RKIP(抑制MAPK和NF-κB信号通路)以及PTEN(抑制PI3K/AKT信号通路)的表达。B-RAF突变在黑色素瘤中的作用及其在诱导EMT中的直接作用尚不清楚。本综述讨论了一种假说,即B-RAF突变参与了NF-κB/Snail/RKIP/PTEN信号回路的失调,以及EMT和转移的诱导过程。B-RAF突变导致上述信号回路失调的治疗意义在于,它们为EMT和转移治疗中的治疗干预提供了新的靶点。