Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development

Although transcript levels have been traditionally used as a surrogate measure of gene expression, it is increasingly recognized that the latter is extensively and dynamically modulated at the level of translation (messenger RNA to protein). Over the recent years, significant progress has been made...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christos Vaklavas, Scott W. Blume, William E. Grizzle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fonc.2017.00158/full
id doaj-c9e66e3ac23f4ab1b91fcc0c9ac348fe
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c9e66e3ac23f4ab1b91fcc0c9ac348fe2020-11-24T23:02:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Oncology2234-943X2017-07-01710.3389/fonc.2017.00158259194Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker DevelopmentChristos Vaklavas0Scott W. Blume1William E. Grizzle2Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United StatesDepartment of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United StatesDepartment of Anatomic Pathology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United StatesAlthough transcript levels have been traditionally used as a surrogate measure of gene expression, it is increasingly recognized that the latter is extensively and dynamically modulated at the level of translation (messenger RNA to protein). Over the recent years, significant progress has been made in dissecting the complex posttranscriptional mechanisms that regulate gene expression. This advancement in knowledge came hand in hand with the progress made in the methodologies to study translation both at gene-specific as well as global genomic level. The majority of translational control is exerted at the level of initiation; nonetheless, protein synthesis can be modulated at the level of translation elongation, termination, and recycling. Sequence and structural elements and epitranscriptomic modifications of individual transcripts allow for dynamic gene-specific modulation of translation. Cancer cells usurp the regulatory mechanisms that govern translation to carry out translational programs that lead to the phenotypic hallmarks of cancer. Translation is a critical nexus in neoplastic transformation. Multiple oncogenes and signaling pathways that are activated, upregulated, or mutated in cancer converge on translation and their transformative impact “bottlenecks” at the level of translation. Moreover, this translational dysregulation allows cancer cells to adapt to a diverse array of stresses associated with a hostile microenviroment and antitumor therapies. All elements involved in the process of translation, from the transcriptional template, the components of the translational machinery, to the proteins that interact with the transcriptome, have been found to be qualitatively and/or quantitatively perturbed in cancer. This review discusses the regulatory mechanisms that govern translation in normal cells and how translation becomes dysregulated in cancer leading to the phenotypic hallmarks of malignancy. We also discuss how dysregulated mediators or components of translation can be utilized as biomarkers with potential diagnostic, prognostic, or predictive significance. Such biomarkers have the potential advantage of uniform applicability in the face of inherent tumor heterogeneity and deoxyribonucleic acid instability. As translation becomes increasingly recognized as a process gone awry in cancer and agents are developed to target it, the utility and significance of these potential biomarkers is expected to increase.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fonc.2017.00158/fullcancermessenger RNA translationdysregulationbiomarkerbiological tumor markereIF4E
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christos Vaklavas
Scott W. Blume
William E. Grizzle
spellingShingle Christos Vaklavas
Scott W. Blume
William E. Grizzle
Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
Frontiers in Oncology
cancer
messenger RNA translation
dysregulation
biomarker
biological tumor marker
eIF4E
author_facet Christos Vaklavas
Scott W. Blume
William E. Grizzle
author_sort Christos Vaklavas
title Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
title_short Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
title_full Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
title_fullStr Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
title_full_unstemmed Translational Dysregulation in Cancer: Molecular Insights and Potential Clinical Applications in Biomarker Development
title_sort translational dysregulation in cancer: molecular insights and potential clinical applications in biomarker development
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Oncology
issn 2234-943X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Although transcript levels have been traditionally used as a surrogate measure of gene expression, it is increasingly recognized that the latter is extensively and dynamically modulated at the level of translation (messenger RNA to protein). Over the recent years, significant progress has been made in dissecting the complex posttranscriptional mechanisms that regulate gene expression. This advancement in knowledge came hand in hand with the progress made in the methodologies to study translation both at gene-specific as well as global genomic level. The majority of translational control is exerted at the level of initiation; nonetheless, protein synthesis can be modulated at the level of translation elongation, termination, and recycling. Sequence and structural elements and epitranscriptomic modifications of individual transcripts allow for dynamic gene-specific modulation of translation. Cancer cells usurp the regulatory mechanisms that govern translation to carry out translational programs that lead to the phenotypic hallmarks of cancer. Translation is a critical nexus in neoplastic transformation. Multiple oncogenes and signaling pathways that are activated, upregulated, or mutated in cancer converge on translation and their transformative impact “bottlenecks” at the level of translation. Moreover, this translational dysregulation allows cancer cells to adapt to a diverse array of stresses associated with a hostile microenviroment and antitumor therapies. All elements involved in the process of translation, from the transcriptional template, the components of the translational machinery, to the proteins that interact with the transcriptome, have been found to be qualitatively and/or quantitatively perturbed in cancer. This review discusses the regulatory mechanisms that govern translation in normal cells and how translation becomes dysregulated in cancer leading to the phenotypic hallmarks of malignancy. We also discuss how dysregulated mediators or components of translation can be utilized as biomarkers with potential diagnostic, prognostic, or predictive significance. Such biomarkers have the potential advantage of uniform applicability in the face of inherent tumor heterogeneity and deoxyribonucleic acid instability. As translation becomes increasingly recognized as a process gone awry in cancer and agents are developed to target it, the utility and significance of these potential biomarkers is expected to increase.
topic cancer
messenger RNA translation
dysregulation
biomarker
biological tumor marker
eIF4E
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fonc.2017.00158/full
work_keys_str_mv AT christosvaklavas translationaldysregulationincancermolecularinsightsandpotentialclinicalapplicationsinbiomarkerdevelopment
AT scottwblume translationaldysregulationincancermolecularinsightsandpotentialclinicalapplicationsinbiomarkerdevelopment
AT williamegrizzle translationaldysregulationincancermolecularinsightsandpotentialclinicalapplicationsinbiomarkerdevelopment
_version_ 1725636345286623232