UDPG and Lung Cancer Metastasis: Unraveling the Relationship
Lung cancer is one of the malignant tumors with fast-growing morbidity and mortality and the worst prognosis. The development of molecular biology and cell biology provides targets for the prevention and treatment of lung cancer and opens up new areas for the development of drugs and methods to treat lung cancer.
Metastasis is the spread of cancer cells
from the primary tumor to other parts of the body. It is a significant
challenge in the treatment of cancer, as it often leads to poor patient
outcomes. Therefore, identifying targets that can effectively inhibit or
disrupt the metastatic process is crucial for developing new therapeutic
strategies.
Lung cancer, like other solid tumors, is
more prone to early invasion and metastasis. Uridine diphosphate glucose
(UDP-Glc) is an important intermediate in glycogen synthesis and is involved in
many biological processes, Preclinical
studies have found that in vivo application of UDPG in rats promotes
intrinsic repair potential to immature brain white matter.
Researchers have found that UDPG promotes
the migration and invasion of lung cancer cells, which are critical steps in
the metastatic process. By targeting UDPG, it may be possible to inhibit these
processes and prevent or limit the spread of lung cancer to other organs.
Additionally, UDPG has been implicated in
the regulation of tumor microenvironment, angiogenesis (formation of new blood
vessels), and immune response. These factors further support its potential as a
therapeutic target for lung cancer metastasis.
Recently, another researcher has identified
uridine diphosphate glucose (UDP-Glc) in the glyoxylate metabolic pathway as an
important molecule in lung cancer metastasis, and it is expected to be a
biochemical target for lung cancer metastasis detection and treatment.
1. Glyoxylate pathway is a key pathway for lung cancer metastasis
Uridine diphosphate glucose dehydrogenase,
a key enzyme in polysaccharide synthesis, is commonly found in organisms and
can catalyze the production of uridine diphosphate glucose (UDP-Glc) to uridine
diphosphate glucuronide (UDP-GlcA). Uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase
(UGT) is one of the important drug metabolism phase II enzymes that catalyze
the biotransformation of various exogenous and endogenous substances in vivo
and can catalyze the transfer of glucuronic acid provided by a variety of
exogenous and endogenous compounds with uridine diphosphate glucuronide to the
hydroxyl, amino, and carboxyl groups of toxic substances or active substances
to form glucuronide glycosides and facilitate exogenous and endogenous
compounds excreted from the body through the bile or kidneys. UGT is capable of
causing metabolite inactivation and modifying the pharmacological activity of
toxicants, and there is growing evidence that glucuronidation can also lead to
an increase in substrate biological activity.
UGT can metabolize many drugs and has also
been widely used in recent years in the metabolic studies of antitumor drugs.
Pharmacokinetics is a science that studies the processes of absorption,
distribution, metabolism, and excretion of drugs in the body. Any new drug or
formulation requires pharmacokinetic tests for preclinical studies to obtain
information and data on the pharmacokinetics of drug metabolism before clinical
studies and marketing.
Medicilon Pharmacokinetics Lab offers in
vivo and in vitro pharmacokinetic tests according to the needs of our clients
and provides them with complete sets of pharmacokinetic evaluation and
optimization services.
Metabolic abnormalities are an important
feature of malignancies, and mutations in cancer-related genes can affect the
metabolism of tumor cells and remodel them to enhance their survival and
growth. Moreover, an abnormal tumor microenvironment can further alter the
metabolic phenotype of tumor cells. Researchers from CAS recently found that
the knockdown of uridine diphosphate glucose dehydrogenase (UGDH) significantly
inhibited metastasis of lung cancer cells, implying that inhibition of the
glyoxylate pathway would inhibit metastasis of lung cancer cells, meaning that
the glyoxylate pathway should be the key pathway that confers the invasive
ability to lung cancer cells, and it should have an important role in the
metastasis of lung cancer. The researchers suggest that this is because the pathway
"stirs" into the metabolic abnormalities of lung cancer cells
controlled by mutated genes.
2, The relationship between UDPG and lung cancer metastasis
They found that phosphorylation of tyrosine
at position 473 (Y473) of UGDH occurs upon activation of the epidermal growth
factor receptor (EGFR). The higher the level of UGDH Y473 phosphorylation in
lung cancer tissues, the higher the chance of developing lung cancer metastasis
and the worse the prognosis of patients. Besides converting UDP-Glc to UDP-GlcUA,
phosphorylated UGDH also has an additional function - it binds to the
mRNA-stabilizing protein HuR and promotes the function of HuR. The main
function of HuR protein is to bind to the 3' end of mRNA, which in turn
enhances the stability of mRNA. Under normal circumstances, safeguarding the
stability of mRNA is naturally a good thing, however, for malignant tumors, it
becomes an evil thing.
The epithelial-mesenchymal transition
(EMT), a decisive step in the acquisition of metastatic capacity by tumor
cells, is a process that confers the ability to metastasize and invade and is
critical for tumor metastasis, and the expression of the SNAIL gene in
malignant tumors is an important process for activating EMT. Therefore, for
lung cancer cells, the more stable SNAIL mRNA is the greater their metastatic
ability.
Researchers found that in primary lung
cancer cells, UDP-Glc significantly inhibited the binding of HuR to SNAI1 mRNA,
which in turn led to SNAI1 mRNA decay! And once EGFR activates UGDH phosphorylation,
UDP-Glc is greatly depleted and loses its inhibitory effect on HuR binding to
SNAI1 mRNA, which enhances SNAI1 mRNA stability and protein expression!
Ultimately, it enhances tumor cell migration and promotes lung cancer
metastasis! In other words, increasing UDP-Glc levels may be an effective means
to curb lung cancer metastasis!
Further studies have found that UDP-Glc
levels are strongly associated with metastasis in lung cancer patients! The
researchers noted that UDP-Glc levels were significantly lower in metastases
compared to the primary site! And the UDP-Glc levels in distal metastases were
significantly lower than those in proximal metastases! This means that UDP-Glc
levels are expected to be an important criterion for determining the metastatic
status of lung cancer!
Although more research is needed to fully
understand the molecular mechanisms underlying UDPG's role in lung cancer
metastasis, these findings provide promising insights into the development of
targeted therapies for detecting and treating metastatic lung cancer.
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