The Redox Role of G6PD in Cell Growth, Cell Death, and Cancer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. G6PD and Cellular Signaling with Emphasis on Redox Signaling
2.1. The Relationship between G6PD and Reactive Species (RS)
2.2. The Interaction between G6PD Status and Reactive Species
2.3. The Redox Role of G6PD in Pathophysiology
3. The Role of G6PD in Cell Growth and Development
3.1. Cyclin and STAT3/5
3.2. ID1/c-Myc/Wnt/β-Catenin
3.3. AMPK
3.4. PAK4/Mdm2/E3/p53
4. The Role of G6PD in Cell Death
4.1. Apoptosis
4.2. Autophagy
4.3. Necrosis and NETotic Cell Death
5. Strategies to Suppress G6PD
5.1. Biochemical Inhibitors
5.1.1. Dehydroepiandrosterone
5.1.2. 6-Aminonicotinamide
5.1.3. Polydatin
5.1.4. Zoledronic Acid
5.2. Noncoding RNA Regulation
5.2.1. Small Interfering RNA
5.2.2. Long Noncoding RNA
5.2.3. MicroRNA
5.3. Other Approaches
5.3.1. TERT Regulation
5.3.2. Protein-Protein Interactions
5.4. G6PD as the Basis for Therapeutic Approaches
6. G6PD/PPP as an Anticancer Target
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cancer Type | Effects of G6PD Activation | Mechanism | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Breast | Enhanced proliferation and migration | Nrf2 upregulates Notch1 and HES-1(proliferation) via G6PD/HIF-1 and regulates EMT (migration) | [44] |
Increased glucose uptake and NADPH production | Histone deacetylase inhibitor reprograms metabolism by upregulating G6PD | [32] | |
Elevated NADPH, Reduced ROS | Overexpression of Histone H3K36 methyltransferase (NSD2) methylates the promoters and upregulates hexokinase 2(HK2) and G6PD | [54] | |
Leukemia | Enhanced cell proliferation and colony formation, lipid synthesis, and NADPH level | Deacetylation of G6PD by SIRT2 | [57] |
Lung | Increased glucose flux through PPP, Enhanced tumor growth as well as production of nucleotide, lipid and reducing equivalents | Glycosylation (O-GlcNAcylation) of G6PD | [45] |
Ovarian | Cancer progression and carcinogenicity | Exosomes | [145] |
Renal | Increased cell proliferation, altered cell cycle, increased ROS production | Activation of NOX4 leads to increased p-STAT3 and CyclinD1 | [146] |
Glioma | Increased cell proliferation, reduced DNA damage | Hsp27 (HSPB1) promotes the interaction between G6PD and SirT2 | [152] |
Multiple cancers | Cell cycle progression and cell proliferation | Phosphorylation of G6PD by Polo-like kinase 1(Plk1) | [49] |
Cancer Type | Effects of G6PD Deficiency | Mechanism | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Bladder | Reduced cell viability and growth, increased apoptosis | Increased ROS accumulation. Suppression of AKT | [42] |
Breast | Reduced cell proliferation, cell survival, increased ROS, decreased ribose (in combination with TKT deficiency) | Increased glycolytic flux and glutamine intake. Decreased lipid synthesis | [25] |
Increased autophagosome, impairment of autophagy flux, increased lapatinib-induced cytotoxicity | Induced endoplasmic reticulum stress | [26] | |
Cervical | Inhibition of viability, decreased migration and proliferation, abnormal cytoskeleton reorganization | Increased ROS induces apoptosis | [20] |
Reduced cell proliferation | miR-206 targets 3′UTR of G6PD | [40] | |
Inhibition of proliferation, promotion of apoptosis, reduced xenograft tumor growth in nude mice | miR-1 suppresses G6PD activity | [41] | |
Colon | High NADP, inhibition of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), impairment of folate-mediated biosynthesis | Induced ME1 and IDH1 compensation | [43] |
Colorectal | Decreased synthesis of ribose and NADPH | Acetylation of G6PD at catalytic site by aspirin | [18] |
Hepatocellular | Suppressed PPP flux, DNA synthesis, and cell growth | Bcl-2 associated athanogene (BAG3) suppresses dimerization and activity of G6PD | [154] |
Reduced G6PD activity | miR-1, miR-122 repress G6PD expression | [55] | |
Leukemia | Increased cytotoxicity, sensitivity to chemotherapy | Overactivation of TORC1 | [31] |
Lung epithelial | Induction of apoptosis, generation of ROS | Activation of TRAIL, FAS, TNF-α receptors, caspase3/9 by phytol | [155] |
Melanoma | Cell cycle arrest, blockade of cell proliferation | Downregulation of cyclin D1 and CDK4, upregulation of p53 and p21 | [16] |
Pituitary | Inhibition of growth, Reduction of NADPH, Reduction of glycolysis | Upregulation miR-1 inhibits G6PD | [19] |
Multiple cancers | Reduction of ribonucleotide and GSH and cell proliferation | Phase 2 drug (RRx-001) downregulates G6PD | [56] |
Status | Mechanism | Reference |
---|---|---|
High glucose | Ubiquitination and degradation of G6PD | [128] |
G6PD inhibitors | ||
DHEA | Uncompetitive inhibitor of G6PD | [20,209] |
6-AN | Competitive inhibitor of G6PD | [42] |
Polydatin | Inhibition of G6PD activity | [210] |
Zoledronic acid | Inhibition of G6PD activity | [211] |
Metabolic switch | From PPP to glycolysis | [31,211,212] |
Noncoding RNA regulation | Direct target to G6PD mRNA or target to G6PD mRNA’s 3′-UTR | [7,41,55,213,214] |
TERT regulation | Inhibition of hTERT decrease G6PD expression | [215] |
Protein-protein interaction | BAG3 directly interacts with G6PD | [48,154] |
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Yang, H.-C.; Wu, Y.-H.; Yen, W.-C.; Liu, H.-Y.; Hwang, T.-L.; Stern, A.; Chiu, D.T.-Y. The Redox Role of G6PD in Cell Growth, Cell Death, and Cancer. Cells 2019, 8, 1055. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells8091055
Yang H-C, Wu Y-H, Yen W-C, Liu H-Y, Hwang T-L, Stern A, Chiu DT-Y. The Redox Role of G6PD in Cell Growth, Cell Death, and Cancer. Cells. 2019; 8(9):1055. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells8091055
Chicago/Turabian StyleYang, Hung-Chi, Yi-Hsuan Wu, Wei-Chen Yen, Hui-Ya Liu, Tsong-Long Hwang, Arnold Stern, and Daniel Tsun-Yee Chiu. 2019. "The Redox Role of G6PD in Cell Growth, Cell Death, and Cancer" Cells 8, no. 9: 1055. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells8091055
APA StyleYang, H.-C., Wu, Y.-H., Yen, W.-C., Liu, H.-Y., Hwang, T.-L., Stern, A., & Chiu, D. T.-Y. (2019). The Redox Role of G6PD in Cell Growth, Cell Death, and Cancer. Cells, 8(9), 1055. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells8091055