Login / Signup

Insights into the Mechanisms of Action of MDA-7/IL-24: A Ubiquitous Cancer-Suppressing Protein.

Jinkal ModiAbhishek RoyAnjan K PradhanAmit KumarSarmistha TalukdarPraveen BhoopathiSantanu MajiPadmanabhan MannangattiDaniel Sanchez De La RosaJiong LiChunqing GuoMark A SublerJolene J WindleWebster K CaveneeDevanand SarkarXiang-Yang WangSwadesh K DasLuni EmdadPaul B Fisher
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Melanoma differentiation associated gene-7/interleukin-24 (MDA-7/IL-24), a secreted protein of the IL-10 family, was first identified more than two decades ago as a novel gene differentially expressed in terminally differentiating human metastatic melanoma cells. MDA-7/IL-24 functions as a potent tumor suppressor exerting a diverse array of functions including the inhibition of tumor growth, invasion, angiogenesis, and metastasis, and induction of potent "bystander" antitumor activity and synergy with conventional cancer therapeutics. MDA-7/IL-24 induces cancer-specific cell death through apoptosis or toxic autophagy, which was initially established in vitro and in preclinical animal models in vivo and later in a Phase I clinical trial in patients with advanced cancers. This review summarizes the history and our current understanding of the molecular/biological mechanisms of MDA-7/IL-24 action rendering it a potent cancer suppressor.
Keyphrases