Roth Eric, Frohman Michael A
The Graduate Program in Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, The Medical Scientist Training Program, and the Department of Pharmacological Sciences, Stony Brook University, New York, 11794, USA.
Adv Biol Regul. 2018 Jan;67:134-140. doi: 10.1016/j.jbior.2017.11.004. Epub 2017 Nov 14.
Phospholipase D (PLD) activity has been proposed to facilitate multiple steps in cancer progression including growth, metabolism, angiogenesis, and mobility. The canonical enzymes PLD1 and PLD2 enact their diverse effects through hydrolyzing the membrane lipid phosphatidylcholine to generate the second messenger and signaling lipid phosphatidic acid (PA). However, the widespread expression of PLD1 and PLD2 in normal tissues and the additional distinct enzymatic mechanisms through which PA can be generated have produced uncertainty regarding the optimal settings in which PLD inhibition might ameliorate cancer. Recent studies in mouse model systems have demonstrated that inhibition or elimination of PLD activity reduces tumor growth and metastasis. One mechanism proposed for this outcome involves proliferative signaling mediated by receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK) and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR), which is attenuated when downstream PLD signal propagation is suppressed. The reduced proliferative signaling has been reported to be compounded by dysfunctional energetic metabolism in the tumor cells under conditions of nutrient deprivation. Moreover, cancer cells lacking PLD activity display inefficiencies across multiple steps of the metastatic cascade, limiting the tumor's lethal spread. Using PLD isoform knockout mice, recent studies have reported on the net effects of inhibition and ablation in multiple cancer models through examining the role of PLD in the non-tumor cells comprising the stroma and microenvironment. The promising results of such in vivo studies, combined with the apparent low toxicity of highly-specific and potent inhibitors, highlights PLD as an attractive target for therapeutic inhibition in cancer. We discuss here the array of anti-tumor effects produced by PLD inhibition and ablation in cancer models with a focus on animal studies.
磷脂酶D(PLD)活性被认为在癌症进展的多个步骤中发挥作用,包括生长、代谢、血管生成和迁移。典型的酶PLD1和PLD2通过水解膜脂磷脂酰胆碱产生第二信使和信号脂质磷脂酸(PA)来发挥其多种作用。然而,PLD1和PLD2在正常组织中的广泛表达以及PA产生的其他不同酶促机制,使得关于PLD抑制可能改善癌症的最佳条件存在不确定性。最近在小鼠模型系统中的研究表明,抑制或消除PLD活性可减少肿瘤生长和转移。提出的这一结果的一种机制涉及由受体酪氨酸激酶(RTK)和G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)介导的增殖信号传导,当下游PLD信号传播受到抑制时,该信号传导会减弱。据报道,在营养剥夺条件下,肿瘤细胞中功能失调的能量代谢会加剧增殖信号传导的减少。此外,缺乏PLD活性的癌细胞在转移级联反应的多个步骤中表现出效率低下,限制了肿瘤的致命扩散。利用PLD亚型敲除小鼠,最近的研究通过研究PLD在构成基质和微环境的非肿瘤细胞中的作用,报道了在多种癌症模型中抑制和消融的净效应。此类体内研究的 promising 结果,加上高特异性和强效抑制剂明显的低毒性,突出了PLD作为癌症治疗抑制的有吸引力的靶点。我们在此讨论在癌症模型中PLD抑制和消融产生的一系列抗肿瘤作用,重点是动物研究。