The function of V-ATPases in cancer

L Stransky, K Cotter, M Forgac - Physiological reviews, 2016 - journals.physiology.org
L Stransky, K Cotter, M Forgac
Physiological reviews, 2016journals.physiology.org
The vacuolar ATPases (V-ATPases) are a family of proton pumps that couple ATP hydrolysis
to proton transport into intracellular compartments and across the plasma membrane. They
function in a wide array of normal cellular processes, including membrane traffic, protein
processing and degradation, and the coupled transport of small molecules, as well as such
physiological processes as urinary acidification and bone resorption. The V-ATPases have
also been implicated in a number of disease processes, including viral infection, renal …
The vacuolar ATPases (V-ATPases) are a family of proton pumps that couple ATP hydrolysis to proton transport into intracellular compartments and across the plasma membrane. They function in a wide array of normal cellular processes, including membrane traffic, protein processing and degradation, and the coupled transport of small molecules, as well as such physiological processes as urinary acidification and bone resorption. The V-ATPases have also been implicated in a number of disease processes, including viral infection, renal disease, and bone resorption defects. This review is focused on the growing evidence for the important role of V-ATPases in cancer. This includes functions in cellular signaling (particularly Wnt, Notch, and mTOR signaling), cancer cell survival in the highly acidic environment of tumors, aiding the development of drug resistance, as well as crucial roles in tumor cell invasion, migration, and metastasis. Of greatest excitement is evidence that at least some tumors express isoforms of V-ATPase subunits whose disruption is not lethal, leading to the possibility of developing anti-cancer therapeutics that selectively target V-ATPases that function in cancer cells.
American Physiological Society