Back to Search
Start Over
Novel mutations involving βI-, βIIA-, or βIVB-tubulin isotypes with functional resemblance to βIII-tubulin in breast cancer
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Springer-Verlag Wien, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Tubulin is the target for very widely used anti-tumor drugs, including Vinca alkaloids, taxanes, and epothilones, which are an important component of chemotherapy in breast cancer and other malignancies. Paclitaxel and other tubulin-targeting drugs bind to the β subunit of tubulin, which is a heterodimer of α and β subunits. β-Tubulin exists in the form of multiple isotypes, which are differentially expressed in normal and neoplastic cells and differ in their ability to bind to drugs. Among them, the βIII isotype is overexpressed in many aggressive and metastatic cancers and may serve as a prognostic marker in certain types of cancer. The underpinning mechanisms accounting for the overexpression of this isotype in cancer cells are unclear. To better understand the role of β-tubulin isotypes in cancer, we analyzed over 1000 clones from 90 breast cancer patients, sequencing their β-tubulin isotypes, in search of novel mutations. We have elucidated two putative emerging molecular subgroups of invasive breast cancer, each of which involve mutations in the βI-, βIIA-, or βIVB isotypes of tubulin that increase their structural, and possibly functional, resemblance to the βIII isotype. A unifying feature of the first of the two subgroups is the mutation of the highly reactive C239 residue of βI- or βIVB-tubulin to L239, R239, Y239, or P239, culminating in probable conversion of these isotypes from ROS-sensitive to ROS-resistant species. In the second subgroup, βI, βIIA, and βIVB have up to seven mutations to the corresponding residues in βIII-tubulin. Given that βIII-tubulin has emerged as a pro-survival factor, overexpression of this isotype may confer survival advantages to certain cancer cell types. In this mini-review, we bring attention to a novel mechanism by which cancer cells may undergo adaptive mutational changes involving alternate β-tubulin isotypes to make them acquire some of the pro-survival properties of βIII-tubulin. These "hybrid" tubulins, combining the sequences and/or properties of two wild-type tubulins (βIII and either βI, βIIA, or βIVB), are novel isotypes expressed solely in cancer cells and may contribute to the molecular understanding and stratification of invasive breast cancer and provide novel molecular targets for rational drug development.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Cancer-associated mutations
Plant Science
Plasma protein binding
Microtubule dynamics
medicine.disease_cause
Microtubules
Mice
Xenopus laevis
0302 clinical medicine
Breast cancer
Salmon
Tubulin
Protein Isoforms
Genetics
Mutation
General Medicine
Tubulin isotypes
Isotype
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Female
Protein Binding
Paclitaxel
Antineoplastic Agents
Breast Neoplasms
macromolecular substances
Biology
Anti-tumor drugs
03 medical and health sciences
Anti-tumor drugs, Breast cancer, Cancer-associated mutations, Microtubule dynamics, Tubulin isotypes, βIII-tubulin
Microtubule
Cell Line, Tumor
medicine
Animals
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Base Sequence
Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Cancer
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Cell Biology
medicine.disease
βIII-tubulin
030104 developmental biology
Drug Resistance, Neoplasm
Cancer cell
Cancer research
biology.protein
Chickens
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ef542681ea983707790398d32b4b01cd