TY - JOUR
T1 - FOXO transcription factors at the interface between longevity and tumor suppression
AU - Greer, Eric L.
AU - Brunet, Anne
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Brunet lab and Dr J Lieberman for helpful comments on the manusc ript. This work was supported in part by PHS Grant Number CA09302, awarded by the National Cancer Institute, DHHS.
PY - 2005/11/14
Y1 - 2005/11/14
N2 - A wide range of human diseases, including cancer, has a striking age-dependent onset. However, the molecular mechanisms that connect aging and cancer are just beginning to be unraveled. FOXO transcription factors are promising candidates to serve as molecular links between longevity and tumor suppression. These factors are major substrates of the protein kinase Akt. In the presence of insulin and growth factors, FOXO proteins are relocalized from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and degraded via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. In the absence of growth factors, FOXO proteins translocate to the nucleus and upregulate a series of target genes, thereby promoting cell cycle arrest, stress resistance, or apoptosis. Stress stimuli also trigger the relocalization of FOXO factors into the nucleus, thus allowing an adaptive response to stress stimuli. Consistent with the notion that stress resistance is highly coupled with lifespan extension, activation of FOXO transcription factors in worms and flies increases longevity. Emerging evidence also suggests that FOXO factors play a tumor suppressor role in a variety of cancers. Thus, FOXO proteins translate environmental stimuli into changes in gene expression programs that may coordinate organismal longevity and tumor suppression.
AB - A wide range of human diseases, including cancer, has a striking age-dependent onset. However, the molecular mechanisms that connect aging and cancer are just beginning to be unraveled. FOXO transcription factors are promising candidates to serve as molecular links between longevity and tumor suppression. These factors are major substrates of the protein kinase Akt. In the presence of insulin and growth factors, FOXO proteins are relocalized from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and degraded via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. In the absence of growth factors, FOXO proteins translocate to the nucleus and upregulate a series of target genes, thereby promoting cell cycle arrest, stress resistance, or apoptosis. Stress stimuli also trigger the relocalization of FOXO factors into the nucleus, thus allowing an adaptive response to stress stimuli. Consistent with the notion that stress resistance is highly coupled with lifespan extension, activation of FOXO transcription factors in worms and flies increases longevity. Emerging evidence also suggests that FOXO factors play a tumor suppressor role in a variety of cancers. Thus, FOXO proteins translate environmental stimuli into changes in gene expression programs that may coordinate organismal longevity and tumor suppression.
KW - Akt
KW - FOXO family of Forkhead transcription factors
KW - Longevity
KW - SIRT1
KW - Stress stimuli
KW - Tumor suppression
KW - p53
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=27844497945&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/sj.onc.1209086
DO - 10.1038/sj.onc.1209086
M3 - Review article
C2 - 16288288
AN - SCOPUS:27844497945
SN - 0950-9232
VL - 24
SP - 7410
EP - 7425
JO - Oncogene
JF - Oncogene
IS - 50
ER -