4.5 Review

The Emerging Role of the Fetal Insulin Receptor in Hormone-refractory Breast Cancer

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 162, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/endocr/bqab147

Keywords

Insulin; insulin-like growth factors; type I insulin-like growth factor; insulin receptor; breast cancer; cancer cell stemness

Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [2P30CA077598, 1R01CA237000-01A1]
  2. Mayo Clinic Breast Cancer SPORE [NIH/NCI 5P50CA116201]

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Inhibitors targeting IGF-1R have not shown additional benefits in clinical trials, possibly due to the prevalent expression of IR-A in cancer. Developing isoform-specific inhibitors targeting IR-A could serve as a predictive biomarker and cotargeting IR-A and IGF-1R could potentially provide a novel and more effective therapy approach.
Type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R) is a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor and a mediator of the biologic effects of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and -II. Inhibitors of IGF-1R signaling were tested in clinical cancer trials aiming to assess the utility of this receptor as a therapeutic target; essentially all IGF-1R inhibitors failed to provide an additional benefit compared with standard-of-care therapy. In this review, we will evaluate the role the insulin receptor (IR) plays in mediating IGF signaling and subsequent metabolic and mitogenic effects as 1 possible reason for these failures. IR is expressed as 2 isoforms, with the fetal isoform IR-A derived from alternative splicing and loss of exon 11, the adult isoform (IR-B) includes this exon. Cancer frequently re-expresses fetal proteins and this appears to be the case in cancer with a re-expression of the fetal isoform and an increased IR-A:IR-B ratio. The biological effects of IR isoform signaling are complex and not completely understood although it has been suggested that IR-A could stimulate mitogenic signaling pathways, play a role in cancer cell stemness, and mediate tolerance to cancer therapies. From a clinical perspective, the IR-A overexpression in cancer may explain why targeting IGF-1R alone was not successful. However, given the predominance of IR-A expression in cancer, it may also be possible to develop isoform specific inhibitors and avoid the metabolic consequences of inhibiting IR-B. If such inhibitors could be developed, then IR-A expression could serve as a predictive biomarker, and cotargeting IR-A and IGF-1R could provide a novel, more effective therapy method.

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