Abstract
The HOXC10 gene, a member of the HOX genes family, plays crucial roles in mammalian physiological processes, such as limb morphological development, limb regeneration, and lumbar motor neuron differentiation. HOXC10 is also associated with angiogenesis, fat metabolism, and sex regulation. Additional evidence suggests that HOXC10 dysregulation is closely associated with various tumors. HOXC10 is an important transcription factor that can activate several oncogenic pathways by regulating various target molecules such as ERK, AKT, p65, and epithelial mesenchymal transition-related genes. HOXC10 also induces drug resistance in cancers by promoting the DNA repair pathway. In this review, we summarize HOXC10 gene structure and expression as well as the role of HOXC10 in different human cancer processes. This review will provide insight into the status of HOXC10 research and help identify novel targets for cancer therapy.
Introduction
HOX genes, a highly conserved subgroup of the homologous box superfamily, play crucial roles in embryonic development (). In mammals, HOX genes are divided into four clusters (HOXA, HOXB, HOXC, HOXD), which located on four different chromosomes (7p15, 17q21, 12q13, and 2q31) (), with each cluster containing 9-11 members (). To date, 39 HOX genes have been identified in mammals and are separated into 13 paralog groups according to the chromosomal position and sequence similarity in each cluster () (Figure 1A). The roles of HOX genes in embryonic development adhere strictly to three principles (): 1) spatial collinearity (the HOX genes 3’ to 5’ position in a cluster is consistent with its expression along the anterior(A)-posterior(P) axis in animals), 2) posterior prevalence (HOX genes in the 5’ cluster will have a more dominant phenotype than those located in the 3’ cluster), and 3) temporal collinearity (the HOX genes expression sequences in each cluster corresponds to their position [3’ to 5’]) (). HOX genes transcription usually occurs during the embryonic development and is lowly expressed in adult cells to participate in cell physiology (, , ). However, HOX genes re-expression occurs in different cancers and is associated with tumor initiation and progression (, , ). In recent decades, the roles of HOX genes in organogenesis and tumorigenesis have been studied in detail (, , , ). In 2014, Bhatlekar et al. () systematically summrized the HOX genes and their roles in human cancer development and concluded that specific HOX genes are expressed in cancers according to tissue type and tumor location. And HOXC family genes expression were upregulated in most solid tumors, including lung, colorectal and prostatic cancers (). These authors also observed that of the 39 human HOX genes, only two of them (HOXC10, HOXC12) were not reported to be aberrantly expressed in a solid tumor (). However, HOXC10, an important member of the HOXC family, was recently reported to be closely related to tumorigenesis. Thus, we have conducted a systematic review of the HOXC10 gene and its role in cancer.
Figure 1
The HOXC10 gene, located on chromosome 12, which contains an intron and two exons in its gene sequence, encodes a protein with 342 amino acids (
Similar to the HOX genes family expression patterns, HOXC10 maintains a low expression level to maintain normal physiological activities in most adult cells. However, HOXC10 appears to be re-expressed in various tumors. Here, we have shown the different HOXC10 expressions across 20 tumor samples and paired normal tissues with a dot plot via GEPIA2.0 (http://gepia2.cancer-pku.cn/) (Figure 2). Moreover, HOXC10 expression have been reported to be positively correlated with poor pathologic stage, and poor prognosis (
Figure 2

Dot plot showing different HOXC10 expression across 20 tumor samples and paired normal tissues. Each dots represents expression of samples. (X-axis: cancer type, Y-axis: log2[TPM + 1]) Tumors data are from the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), and normal data are from the TCGA and GTEx database. Data were visualized using GEPIA2.0 (http://gepia2.cancer-pku.cn/).
Table 1
| Tumour type | Expression | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Up |
|
| ||
| Down |
| |
| Cervical carcinoma | Up |
|
| Colorectal cancer (CRC) | Up |
|
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma(ESCC) | Up | Resisted to chemo-radiotherapy and predicted poor prognosis ( |
| Glioblastoma(GBM) | Up |
|
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| Gastric cancer(GC) | Up |
|
| Correlated with recurrence and poor survival ( | ||
| ||
| ||
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Up |
|
| Lung adenocarcinoma | Up |
|
| Liver cancer | Down |
|
| Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) | Up |
|
| Non-small cell lung cancer(NSCLC) | Up |
|
| ||
| Osteosarcoma (OS) | Up |
|
| ||
| Ovarian cancer | Up |
|
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) | Up |
|
| ||
| Thyroid cancer | Up | Promoted cell cycle, migration and invasion ( |
HOXC10 expression and function in various cancers.
Figure 3

(A) HOXC10 expression is regulated by DNA methylation, histone methylation, miRNA, lncRNA, and the ubiquitin-degradation pathway. (B) Abnormal HOXC10 expression can induce tumor occurrence and development by promoting cell proliferation, metastasis, angiogenesis, drug resistance and avoidance of immune destruction.
HOXC10 Is Involved in Tumorigenesis, Metastasis, and Drug Resistance
Abnormal expression of HOXC10 has been reported in various tumors (Table 1). Anomalous HOXC10 expression is strongly associated with cancer occurrence and progression (
Tumorigenesis
Dysregulation of HOXC10 expression is common in tumors and indicates that HOXC10 may contribute to tumor occurrence and development. Kim et al. used the TCGA data to compare the gene expressions in gastric cancer and normal tissues and found that HOXC10 expression was significantly promoted in gastric cancer (
Next, we have systematically summarized the potential molecular mechanisms of HOXC10 in tumorigenesis. The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway, a clearest pathway in cancer biology, can induce carcinogenesis by activating the expression of proliferation-related genes and promoting cell overgrowth (
Aberrant activation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K/AKT) signaling pathway is the most frequent events in tumorigenesis and contributes to carcinogenic transformation by regulating cell proliferation, apoptosis, metastasis, and autophagy (
HOXC10 can induce tumorigenesis by regulating angiogenesis and immunoregulation. Angiogenesis, the process of growth of new capillary blood vessels from existing capillaries, is important in tumor growth and metastasis (
HOXC10 can regulate the cell cycle and apoptosis in tumorigenesis. Guerra et al. revealed that HOXC10 overexpression promoted non-small cell lung cancer cells moving into the S phase, thus promoting cell proliferation (
Tumor Metastasis and Invasion
Metastasis is the main cause of high recurrence rates and low survival rates in cancer patients. Recent studies revealed that HOXC10 expression was strongly linked to tumor metastasis and invasion in various tumors. In studying cervical carcinoma, Zhai et al. used high-density oligonucleotide microarrays to compared gene expression in microdissected squamous epithelial samples from normal cervices, high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions, and invasive squamous cell carcinomas, found HOXC10 have the highest expression in invasive squamous cell carcinomas (
Further research revealed that the molecular mechanisms by which HOXC10 regulates tumor metastasis and invasion. Li et al. found that HOXC10 overexpression promoted metastasis and invasion by upregulating inflammatory cytokines in gastric cancer (
EMT, a biological process in which epithelial cells are endowed with mesenchymal cellular characteristics, can reduce cell-cell adhesion ability and enhance tumor cell migration and invasion (
Drug Resistance
Drug resistance is a major reason for tumor therapy failure, and the underlying mechanisms must be explore to overcome it. Recent studies revealed that HOXC10 is closely related to the occurrence of drug resistance in various tumors. In ER-positive breast cancer, Pathiraja et al. found that HOXC10 promoters showed significant methylation enrichment in two breast cancer cell line models of aromatase inhibitors (AIs) resistance (
DNA damage is a direct or indirect response to antitumor drug therapy, and tumors can induce the development of drug resistance by increasing DNA repair activity. HOXC10 was found to contribute to drug resistance in cancers by fine-tuning DNA repair. For double-strand breaks (DSB) repair, HOXC10 recruited homologous recombination (HR) repair proteins (RAD51, BRCA1) at the DNA damage sites. However, HOXC10 was undetectable at the I-Sce1 cleavage site, indicating that HOXC10 does not play a direct role in DSBs repair (
HOXC10 Expression Regulation
Our review has described the roles and mechanisms of HOXC10 in the different processes of human cancers. We also provided a comprehensive description of HOXC10 expression regulation. Specifically, HOXC10 expression is regulated by several epigenetic processes, including DNA (
DNA methylation causes changes in chromatin structure, DNA conformation, DNA stability and the methods by which DNA interacts with proteins to regulate gene expression (101). Studies have shown that HOXC10 expression is closely related to changes in DNA methylation, and DNA methylation generally functions as a repressive transcriptional signal. Lim et al. (
G-quadruplex (G4) refers to a four-stranded secondary structure formed by guanine-rich nucleic acid sequences through Hoogsteen hydrogen bonding in the DNA or RNA strand. Studies of G4 in humans and animals demonstrated that G4 is involved in a wide range of basic biological functions such as DNA replication, transcription, translation, and maintenance of telomeric structure (102). Zhang et al. (103) analyzed DNA sequences upstream of the HOXC10 transcription start site, verified the formation of G-quadruplex structures in the negative strand of the HOXC10 promoter and revealed that these structures could inhibit HOXC10 expression. These authors also confirmed that CHD7, a chromatin remodeling protein with DNA helicase activity, could associate with the HOXC10 promoter and likely unwind the G4 structures to enhance its gene expression (103). Conversely, Li et al. (
Histone modification plays an important role in regulating gene expression in eukaryotes. Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), comprised of the H3K27 methylases EZH2, SUZ12 and EED, can catalyze mono-, di-, and trimethylation of lysine 27 on histone H3 (H3K27) (104). Previous studies revealed that HOX genes were canonical PRC2 targets (105) and HOXC10 was a direct PRC2 target, which was demonstrated using chromatin immunoprecipitation-X enrichment analysis and ENCODE datasets (97). Guerra et al. (
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs that can degrade or suppress the translation of target mRNAs by base pairing with the 3’-untranslated region (3’UTR) (106). Several miRNAs, such as miR-129-5p (
Antisense transcripts can regulate alternative splicing, transport and structural stability of the sense transcripts by forming double-stranded RNA structures with the sense transcript (107). Li et al. (
Other researchers found that HOXC10 expression was also related to protein stability. Gabellini et al. (100) found that HOXC10 expression was reduced in the early G1 phase, abundant from the mid-G1 to G2 phases and undetectable in mitosis. Northern blot analysis showed that HOXC10 mRNA levels did not change, suggesting that HOXC10 levels may be regulated post-translationally. Further studies showed that HOXC10 could coimmunoprecipitate the APC subunit, CDC27, and protein degradation of HOXC10 was suppressed by expression of a dominant-negative form of UbcH10, an APC-associated ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme. These data implied that HOXC10 protein stability was regulated by the UbcH10/APC-mediated ubiquitination pathway.
Conclusion and Future Perspectives
In recent years, significant has been made progress in understanding the function of HOXC10 in various physiological and pathological process. Interestingly, the tissues that are developmentally regulated by HOXC10 during embryogenesis appear to be more likely to lead to malignancies. Choe et al. reported that HOXC10 and the other HOX10 paralogs were key to axial skeletal positioning and neural tissue development, and mutations in these genes could affect motor neuron patterning (
Accumulating research has showed that HOXC10 expression is dysregulated in various cancers and serves as an oncogenic driver in cancer processes (Table 1). In this review, we summarized the mechanism of HOXC10 in tumorigenesis and found that abnormal HOXC10 expression induced tumor occurrence by regulating cell proliferation, cycles, apoptosis, and angiogenesis and by avoiding immune destruction. Additionally, HOXC10 can regulate tumor invasion by regulating the NF-κB signal pathway, EMT and the expression of metastasis-related genes. Moreover, HOXC10 affects the drug treatment response and induce drug resistance in tumors (Figure 3B). These studies suggest that HOXC10 may be a potential prognostic factor and therapeutic target in cancer (
Although HOXC10 appears to play an important role in many cancers, its precise function remains unclear. To date, most of studies on HOXC10 expression and function are derived from retrospective analyses of patient tumors. These studies only hint at the mechanisms underlying the roles of these genes in oncogenesis, without adequate treatment information. Recently, Guerra et al. (
Funding
This work was supported by Zhejiang Public Welfare Technology Research Program (LGF19H030018), Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang province (LY21H160014). Jin Hua Science and Technology Plan Project (2018-3-3001C).
Statements
Author contributions
All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest
Glossary
| TPM | Transcripts per kilobase million |
| ACC | Adrenocortical carcinoma |
| BRCA | Breast invasive carcinoma |
| CESC | Cervical squamous cell carcinoma and endocervical adenocarcinoma |
| COAD | Colon adenocarcinoma |
| DLBC | Lymphoid neoplasm diffuse large B-cell lymphoma |
| ESCA | Esophageal carcinoma |
| GBM | Glioblastoma multiforme |
| HNSC | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma |
| LGG | Brain lower grade glioma |
| LIHC | Liver hepatocellular carcinoma |
| LUAD | Lung adenocarcinoma |
| LUSC | Lung squamous cell carcinoma |
| PAAD | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma |
| PRAD | Prostate adenocarcinoma |
| READ | Rectum adenocarcinoma |
| STAD | Stomach adenocarcinoma |
| THCA | Thyroid carcinoma |
| THYM | Thymoma |
| UCEC | Uterine corpus endometrial carcinoma |
| UCS | Uterine carcinosarcoma |
| EMT | Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition |
| MAPK | The mitogen-activated protein kinase |
| JNK | C-Jun N-terminal kinase |
| ERK | Extracellular signal-regulated kinase |
| FGFBP1 | Fibroblast growth factor-binding protein 1 |
| SOX10 | SRY-Box Transcription Factor 10 |
| PI3K | the phosphoinositide 3-kinase |
| ERBB3 | Erb-b2 receptor tyrosine kinase 3 |
| VEGFA | Vascular Endothelial Cell Growth Factor A |
| TGF-β | Transforming growth factor-β |
| CCL2 | C-C motif chemokine ligand 2 (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1,MCP-1) |
| PD-L2 | Programmed cell death 1 ligand 2 |
| TDO2 | Tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase |
| PRC2 | Polycomb-repressive complex 2 |
| E2F | Transcription Factor |
| ATM | Ataxia telangiectasia-mutated gene |
| DSB | Double-strand breaks repair |
| HR | Homologous recombination |
| NNHEJ | Non-homologous DNA end joining |
| AIs | Aromatase inhibitors |
| ER | estrogen receptor |
| DNMTs | DNA methyltransferases |
| G4 | G-quadruplex |
| CHD7 | Chromodomain Helicase DNA Binding Protein 7 |
| APC | Anaphase-promoting complex |
| BET | Bromodomain and extraterminal domain |
| MEK | MAP kinase kinase |
| PDX | patient-derived tumor xenograft |
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Summary
Keywords
HOXC10, tumorigenesis, metastasis, drug resistance, expression regulation
Citation
Fang J, Wang J, Yu L and Xu W (2021) Role of HOXC10 in Cancer. Front. Oncol. 11:684021. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2021.684021
Received
22 March 2021
Accepted
04 May 2021
Published
25 May 2021
Volume
11 - 2021
Edited by
Shilpa S. Dhar, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, United States
Reviewed by
Zhenjia Wang, University of Virginia, United States; Bruce Boman, Christiana Care Health Center, United States
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© 2021 Fang, Wang, Yu and Xu.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Wenxia Xu, xuwenxia@zju.edu.cn; Liangliang Yu, ydyy30383@163.com
†These authors have contributed equally to this work and share first authorship
This article was submitted to Molecular and Cellular Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Oncology
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