4.7 Review

Redox biology in normal cells and cancer: Restoring function of the redox/Fyn/c-Cbl pathway in cancer cells offers new approaches to cancer treatment

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 79, Issue -, Pages 300-323

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2014.10.860

Keywords

Redox; Stem cell; Progenitor cell; Oligodendrocyte/type-2 astrocyte progenitor cell; c-Cbl; Redox/Fyn/c-Cbl pathway; Glioblastoma; Basal-like breast cancer; Tumor initiating cell; Tamoxifen

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CA131385, ES012708, CO24319, AG030711]
  2. New York State Department of Health and Empire State Stem Cell Board (NYSTEM) [N09G195, C026877]
  3. Komen Foundation for the Cure [BCTR0707697]
  4. Department of Defense [AS073218]
  5. Autism Speaks
  6. Wilmot Cancer Institute

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This review discusses a unique discovery path starting with novel findings on redox regulation of precursor cell and signaling pathway function and identification of a new mechanism by which relatively small changes in redox status can control entire signaling networks that regulate self-renewal, differentiation, and survival. The pathway central to this work, the redox/Fyn/c-Cbl (RFC) pathway, converts small increases in oxidative status to pan-activation of the c-Cbl ubiquitin ligase, which controls multiple receptors and other proteins of central importance in precursor cell and cancer cell function. Integration of work on the RFC pathway with attempts to understand how treatment with systemic chemotherapy causes neurological problems led to the discovery that glioblastomas (GBMs) and basal-like breast cancers (BLBCs) inhibit c-Cbl function through altered utilization of the cytoskeletal regulators Cool-1/beta pix and Cdc42, respectively. Inhibition of these proteins to restore normal c-Cbl function suppresses cancer cell division, increases sensitivity to chemotherapy, disrupts tumor-initiating cell (TIC) activity, in GBMs and BLBCs, controls multiple critical TIC regulators: and also allows targeting of non-TICs. Moreover, these manipulations do not increase chemosensitivity or suppress division of nontransformed cells. Restoration of normal c-Cbl function also allows more effective harnessing of estrogen receptor-alpha (ER alpha)-independent activities of tamoxifen to activate the RFC pathway and target ER alpha-negative cancer cells. Our work thus provides a discovery strategy that reveals mechanisms and therapeutic targets that cannot be deduced by standard genetics analyses, which fail to reveal the metabolic information, isoform shifts, protein activation, protein complexes, and protein degradation critical to our discoveries. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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