Regulation of calcium signaling in lung cancer
State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, the First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical College, Guangzhou 510120, PR China
Review Article
Regulation of calcium signaling in lung cancer
State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, the First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical College, Guangzhou 510120, PR China
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Abstract
Lung cancer is the most common malignant tumor in the world. Calcium is a ubiquitous cellular signal, which is crucial in cancer. This review
presents regulation of calcium signaling in lung cancer. Altered expression of specific Ca2+ channels and Ca2+-binding proteins are
characterizing features of lung cancer, which regulate cell signaling pathway leading to cell proliferation or apoptosis. Chemoresistance is
frequent in lung cancer. Altered endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ homeostasis of lung cancer cell is correlated with drug resistance. Hypoxia has
a vital role in tumor angiogenesis, metastasis, apoptosis. And Ca2+ channels are open induced by hypoxia with the increase of Ca2+ influx
causing tumor growth.
Key words
calcium; lung cancer; endoplasmic reticulum; calcium channels; calcium-binding protein
J Thorac Dis 2010;2:52-56. DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2010.02.01.015
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Calcium, as the second messenger, is essential signal transduction
element involved in cell growth including cell cycle, differenation,
proliferation and apoptosis. Calcium signaling is activated
in the cell with pathological condition, which leading to intracellular
environment changing and cell abnormal reaction. In
general, prolonged increases in Ca2+ or long-lasting Ca2+ -oscillations
(hours) are believed to trigger proliferation, while short lasting,
high amplitude elevations of Ca2+ can increase mitochondrial
Ca2+ level and promote cell death (1-3). Therefore, careful control
of calcium signaling is required for cell survival. The intracellular
calcium concentration plays an important role in cell activities, regulated
by release from endoplasmic reticulum stores or influx
through a variety of Ca2+ ion channels (4). Voltage-gated (VGCC),
receptor-gated (ROCC) and store-operated (SOCC) channels in the
membrane, along with ryanodine receptors (RynR) and inositol
triphosphate receptors (IP3R) at the ER store, provides fluxes of
Ca2+ to the cytoplasm. Furthermore calcium pumps and ion exchangers
are involved in the Ca2+ releasing too (5,6). ATPases
pumps transport Ca2+ against a concentration gradient, including
the plasmalemmal Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) in the plasma membrane
which is responsible for the efflux to Ca2+ out of cells, and the sarcoplasmic/
endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA) which
pump Ca2+ from cytoplasm into ER. Ca2+ exchangers such as Na+/Ca2+ exchanger are crucial in the transport of Ca2+ in neurons and
cardiac cells (7,8).
ER Ca2+-homeostasis is one of the most important apoptosis
pathways. And Ca2+ is the crucial effector, so careful control of calcium
in ER is important for the cell apoptosis. Figure 1 shows the
releasing of Ca2+ from ER. Signaling pathway involved in the Ca2+
release from the ER are the PLC-IP3 and MAPK, activated by calcium
sensing G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). The key receptors
regulating Ca2+ release from the ER are IP3R and RyR, and
SERCA force calcium against the concentration gradient from the
cytoplasm into ER. Furthermore Ca2+ modulation is performed by
calreticulin in the ER (9,10). Reducing of the Ca2+ in ER can result
from Ca2+-influx from the extracellular space. SOCC in the membrane
is activated by the emptying of the intracellular Ca2+-stores
causing Ca2+ influx. This process is name by store-operated calcium
entry (SOCE). SOCE plays a vital role in the cell function including
emiocytosis, enzyme activity, cell cycle and apoptosis (11).
The most popular channel in SOCE is calcium-release activated
calcium (CRAC) channel. Stim1 as the ER Ca2+ sensor, the highly
Ca2+-selective CRAC channel Orai1 and transient receptor potential
(TRPC) as the effector of membrane, expressed in cells (12,13).
Moreover Stim1-Orai1 and Stim1-TRPC are important protein
complexes in CRAC, and there maybe func tional interactions among
Orai1, TRPCs, and Stim1 in regualting cell proliferation and
apoptosis (14-16).
Lung cancer is the most common malignant tumor in the world.
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the majority of lung cancer,
approximately 80% of total malignancies, with a 5-year survival
of only 15%. The other 20% of total lung cancer is small cell
lung cancer (SCLC). Here we focus on how Ca2+ might contribute
to tumorigenesis and tumor growth in lung cancer.
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Calcium channels in cancer
Previous data suggest that carcinogenic stimuli cause local increase
in the Ca2+ concentration leading to activation of proto-
oncogenes and to inactivation of tumor-suppressor genes, which
lead to the manifestation of a malignant phenotype. Tumor cell
proliferation maybe stimulated by persistant increase of Ca2+, in
contrary the transitory fulminic increase of Ca2+ induce the activation
of mitochondrial apoptotic pathway (17). As described above,
local increases in Ca2+ concentration can be caused by efflux from
the ER or influx from the extra cell through Ca2+ channels. Most reports
show the Ca2+ channels increase in the malignant tumors, and
the correlations between these channels (VGCC, ROCC and
SOCC) and tumor have been addressed widely. Moreover, SOCE
induced by SOCC is mostly investigated in the malignant tumor
now. T-type Ca2+ channels play an important role in controlling cell
growth. Similarly the mRNA and protein expression of TRPC famliy
are found increasing in the cell lines of breast, prostate and liver
cancer, therein TRPC1 and TRPC6 are most popular (18-21). Furthermore,
tumor cells growth could be inhibited by silencing these
Ca2+ channels genes expression. Signal pathway activation, i.e.,
GPCR-PLC-IP3 or GPCR-PLC-DAG, are improtant for SOCE induced
by TRPC, which lead to the increase of calcium concetration
activating calcium binding proteins and nuclear transcription factors,
causing tumor cell proliferation (22).
Stim1 and Orai1 are essential for tumor cell migration and proliferation
in vitro and vivo. In breast cancer, reduction of Orai1 or
Stim1 by RNA interference in highly metastatic human breast cancer
cells or treatment with a pharmacological inhitor of SOCC decreased
tumor metastasis in animal models (23). In liver cancer, it’
s reported that TRPC6, Stim1 and Orai1 regulate tumor migration
and proliferation together (24). SOCE amplitude could be reduced
by Stim1 and Orai1 knockdowns, suggesting possible cooperation
between these proteins and TRPC6 in controlling tumor proliferation
and apoptosis. However the mechanism is still unknown.
L-type calcium channel (LTCC) is widely studied in VGCC. It
was shown that colon cancer cells expressed LTCCmRNA, comprising
an alph-1D and a beta-3 subunit. The selective calcium
channel agonist could dose-dependently increase intracellular Ca2+
levels and the level of apoptosis in colon cancer cells. On the contrary, the inhibitor of calcium channels could abolish completely
the above results (25). However Berchtold had the contrary report
in B-lymphoma and breast cancer cells (26). The inhibitor of
LTCC reduced the level of calcium-dependent NF-κ B in tumor
cells which expressing LTCC subunit Cav1.3 gene, causing the decrease
of calcium influx and the increase of apoptosis in tumor
cells. The difference of the above results may be due to the different
subunits of LTCC expressed by tumor cells, determining Ca2+ to
participate in proliferation or apoptosis in tumor cells.
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Calcium channels and lung cancer
Lambert Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS) is usually associated
with SCLC. VGCC (P/Q subtype) antibodies are often found
in these patients, which play a pathogenic role in LEMS. Monstad
et al showed that VGCC antibodies were seen in a proportion of
SCLC patients, thus similar immunoreaction maybe exist in SCLC.
But the VGCC antibodies do not correlate with the prognosis of the
SCLC (27). There are a few researches about calcium channels in
NSCLC. Report by Carlisle, et al. showed that nicotine could activate
LTCC inducing the increase of Ca2+ influx in 273T NSCLC
cell line, which inhibited by the inhibitor of nicotinic acetylcholine
receptor or PI3K (28). A study performed in NSCLC cell lines
found that overexpression of CACNA2D2 gene (a subunit of the
Ca2+-channel complex) induced apoptosis in H1299, H358, H460
and A549 cell lines through elevating intracellular free Ca2+ level
(29).
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Calcium-binding proteins and lung cancer
Ca2+ appears to exert mitosis or apoptosis of cells as a secondary
messenger or signal transducer determined by its location, intracellular
concentration and so on. Ca2+ store, releasing and uptake in all
cells except muscle cell are regulated by ER. After IP3 binding
with IP3 receptor of ER, Ca2+ channels are open associated with the
increase of intracellular Ca2+ concentration. Then Ca2+-dependent
proteins or Ca2+-binding proteins are stimulated exerting cell biological
effects. A number of Ca2+-binding proteins have been characterized
as having properties, to play a role as putative intracellular
Ca2+ receptors.
The reaction to Ca2+ in cells lies on Ca2+-binding proteins and
Ca2+/CaM -dependent kinase. CaM has a vital role in transferring
signal out of cells into intracellular biological effects as the predominant
receptor of Ca2+. CaM is a small, heat and acid-stable
protein which exists as a monomer and presents four similar but
distinguishable Ca2+-binding domains allowing interacting with different
poteins (30). It was found that the CaM level of lung cancers
was significantly higher than that of host lungs, benign lung diseases
and normal lungs and significantly correlated with the
histopathological grading and TNM staging of lung cancers. Moreover,
there was a significant positive correlation between the cellular
DNA content and tissue CaM level in lung cancers. So it’s believed that CaM plays an important role in the proliferation of lung
cancer cells (31). CaMⅡ phosphorylation could activate all kinds
of kinases or transcription factors regulating tumor proliferation
and apoptosis. Death –associated protein kinase (DAPK) is one of
these kinases, which involved in DNA damage-induced apoptosis
and showed low level in the early stage of NSCLC. Thus DAPK is
crucial in the progression of NSCLC (32). Camp-regulatory element-
binding protein (CREB) is a key transcription factor in
NSCLC, which can be activated through phosphorylation by a
number of kinases including Ca2+/CaM-dependent kinases. CREB
is overexpressed and constitutively phosphorylated in NSCLC, and
appears to play a direct role indisease pathogenesis and prognosis
(33).
Calcineurin (CaN) is serine/threonine protein kinase regulated
by Ca2+/CaM, which exert biological effects through dephosphorylation.
Maxeine, et al demonstrated that nuclear factor of activated
T cells c2 (NFATc2) mediated by CaN expressed low level of mRNA
in NSCLC, furthermore more and large tumors were developed
and T cell immunity decreased in NFATc2 (-/-) mice (34). Mitochondrial
stress can cause resistance to apoptosis in cancer. Both
insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF1R) are increased
in response to mitochondrial stress. CaN is activated as
part of this stress signaling. In A549 lung cancer cell line, inhibiting
CaN expression using inhibitor or small interference RNA
could inhibit significantly the IGF1R pathway which is important
in tumor cell proliferation and reduced apoptosis (35).
ER stress can induce cell apoptosis, which is one of the most
important pathways of apoptosis in vivo. The imbalance of the ER
Ca2+ homeostasis results in ER stress and cell apoptosis. Calreticulin
is important Ca2+-binding protein in ER. The cell is more sensitive
to apoptosis while the protein is overexpressed. Recent investigation
suggests that in the SCLC (H1339) and NSCLC (HCC)
cell lines the ER Ca2+-content was reduced and correlated with a
decreased level of calreticulin compared to NHBE cell line, which
could lead to reduced apoptosis in cells (36).
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Calcium and chemoresistance
Chemotherapy often leads to encouraging reponses in lung cancer.
But, in the course of the treatment, resistance to chemotherapy
ultimately limits the life expectancy of the patient. Intracellular calcium
concentration may play a role in the development of
chemoresistance. Altered Ca2+ homeostasis of cell is correlated
with cisplatin or Taxol resistance in NSCLC cell lines (A549 and
EPLC) or SCLC cell line (H1339). The Ca2+ content of the ER is
decreased with the low level of SERCA expression in chemoresistant
lung cancer cell lines. Thus a reduced Ca2+ content of the ER
maybe induce chemoresistance in lung cancer (37,38).
Multi drug resistance (MDR) is a process where malignant cells
become resistant to structurally diverse chemotherapeutic agents
exposure to a single type of cytotoxic drug. Certain cell lines have
been associated with a decrease of drug accumulation due to enhanced efflux of drugs, which is attributed to the overexpression of
the P-gp (39). Calcium channel and calmodulin antagonist could
reverse the drug resistance due to MDR. It has been suggested that
the antagonist may have pharmacological effects like calmodulin
or protein kinase C inhibition causing P-gp primary structure or
post translational modification and changing of functional state of
P-gp (30).
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Calcium, hypoxia and lung cancer
Calcium channels are open induced by hypoxia with the increase
of Ca2+ influx. During the progression of malignant tumor,
with the tumor size increasing hypoxia can occur in the local region.
Thus hypoxia has a vital role in tumor angiogenesis, metastasis,
apoptosis and chemoresistance. Hypoxia inducible factor 1
(HIF-1) is important protein involved in regulation of the transcriptional
of a variety of genes related to oxygen homeostasis and hypoxia,
which is crucial in the occurrence and development of
NSCLC (40,41). The mutation of PI3K or PTEN is one of the most
important mechanisms related to HIF-1α activation under normoxic
condition. However, HIF-1 proteins could be stimulated through
MAPK pathway no matter hypoxia or not, and increasing of Ca2+
influx and calmodulin would act upstream of ERK in the hypoxia
signal transduction pathway leading to enchanced HIF-1 transcriptional
activity (42,43). In NSCLC, induced by hypoxia, Zhang et al.
reported that nicotine increased HIF-1α and VEGF expression in
A549 cell line, which could be inhibited after blocked by
Ca2+/calmodulin inhibitor (44).
No matter whether hypoxia or normoxia exists, NF-κ B is the
vital transcriptional factor in the progress of tumor development.
Under normoxic condition, the expression of LTCC subunit Cav1.3
mRNA is increased in B-cell lymphoma and breast cancer cell
lines. Moreover CaM-dependent NF-κ B is activated with the increasing
of Ca2+ influx (26).ER stress or overload (accumulation of
proteins in the ER membrane) can lead to efflux of Ca2+ from ER
through IP3R or RyR activating NF-κ B pathway (45). However
now there is no similar research under hypoxic condition. In liver
and brain cells, NF-κ B links innate immunity to the hypoxic response
through transcriptional regulation of HIF-1α in vivo and
vitro (46). But the above result is still unidentified in lung tissues,
so we believe it is possible that CaM-dependent NF-κ B is activated
to hypoxic condition by the increase channels of Ca2+ and play a
vital role in regulating HIF-1α or other downstream genes which
may be enhanced by nicotine.
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Conclusion
Ca2+ regulates various cellular processes by activating or inhibiting
cellular signaling pathways and Ca2+-regulated proteins, and it
deserves to do further researches in lung cancer. Since tumorigenesis
and tumor growth in lung cancer are complicated and multiple
factor resulted, the role of Ca2+ in lung cancer cells is complicated too, which is determined by its location and combined proteins,
moreover different subtypes of Ca2+ channel may play a various
role in it.
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References
Cite this article as: Yang HH, Zhang Q, He JX, Lu WJ. Regulation of calcium signaling in lung cancer. J Thorac Dis 2010;2:52-56. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2010.02.01.015
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