4.6 Article

Bile acids destabilise HIF-1α and promote anti-tumour phenotypes in cancer cell models

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2528-2

Keywords

Bile acids; HIF-1 transcription factor; HIF-1 alpha subunit; Cancer models; Hypoxia; Dimethyloxaloglycine (DMOG)

Categories

Funding

  1. European Commission (FP7-PEOPLE-ITN) [607786, FP7-KBBE-2012-6, CP-TP-312184, 311975, OCEAN 2011-2, 287589, 256596, EU-634486]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland [SSPC-2, 12/RC/2275, 13/TIDA/B2625, 12/TIDA/B2411, 12/TIDA/B2405, 14/TIDA/2438]
  3. Department of Agriculture and Food (FIRM/RSF/CoFoRD) [FIRM 08/RDC/629, FIRM 1/F009/MabS, FIRM 13/F/516]
  4. Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology [PD/2011/2414, GOIPG/2014/647]
  5. Health Research Board/Irish Thoracic Society [MRCG-2014-6]
  6. Marine Institute (Beaufort award) [C2CRA 2007/082]
  7. Teagasc (Walsh Fellowship)
  8. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [12/TIDA/B2405, 14/TIDA/2438, 13/TIDA/B2625, 12/TIDA/B2411] Funding Source: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)

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Background: The role of the microbiome has become synonymous with human health and disease. Bile acids, as essential components of the microbiome, have gained sustained credibility as potential modulators of cancer progression in several disease models. At physiological concentrations, bile acids appear to influence cancer phenotypes, although conflicting data surrounds their precise physiological mechanism of action. Previously, we demonstrated bile acids destabilised the HIF-1 alpha subunit of the Hypoxic-Inducible Factor-1 (HIF-1) transcription factor. HIF-1 overexpression is an early biomarker of tumour metastasis and is associated with tumour resistance to conventional therapies, and poor prognosis in a range of different cancers. Methods: Here we investigated the effects of bile acids on the cancer growth and migratory potential of cell lines where HIF-1 alpha is known to be active under hypoxic conditions. HIF-1 alpha status was investigated in A-549 lung, DU-145 prostate and MCF-7 breast cancer cell lines exposed to bile acids (CDCA and DCA). Cell adhesion, invasion, migration was assessed in DU-145 cells while clonogenic growth was assessed in all cell lines. Results: Intracellular HIF-1 alpha was destabilised in the presence of bile acids in all cell lines tested. Bile acids were not cytotoxic but exhibited greatly reduced clonogenic potential in two out of three cell lines. In the migratory prostate cancer cell line DU-145, bile acids impaired cell adhesion, migration and invasion. CDCA and DCA destabilised HIF-1 alpha in all cells and significantly suppressed key cancer progression associated phenotypes; clonogenic growth, invasion and migration in DU-145 cells. Conclusions: These findings suggest previously unobserved roles for bile acids as physiologically relevant molecules targeting hypoxic tumour progression.

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