4.6 Article

Downregulation of both mismatch repair and non-homologous end-joining pathways in hypoxic brain tumour cell lines

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.11275

Keywords

Glioblastoma; Hypoxia; DNA repair; NanoString; DNA Ligase IV; PMS2; HIF inhibition; Non-homologous end-joining; Mismatch repair

Funding

  1. Alder Hey Oncology Fund

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This study investigated the impact of chronic hypoxia on DNA repair gene expression in glioblastoma cell lines, revealing that hypoxia primarily resulted in downregulation of DNA repair genes, with the extent of downregulation depending on the severity of hypoxia. Some downregulations were directly controlled by HIF activity, indicating that multiple molecular mechanisms are involved in hypoxia-induced reprogramming of DNA repair gene transcription.
Glioblastoma, a grade N astrocytoma, has a poor survival rate in part due to ineffective treatment options available. These tumours are heterogeneous with areas of low oxygen levels, termed hypoxic regions. Many intra-cellular signalling pathways, including DNA repair, can be altered by hypoxia. Since DNA damage induction and subsequent activation of DNA repair mechanisms is the cornerstone of glioblastoma treatment, alterations to DNA repair mechanisms could have a direct influence on treatment success. Our aim was to elucidate the impact of chronic hypoxia on DNA repair gene expression in a range of glioblastoma cell lines. We adopted a NanoString transcriptomic approach to examine the expression of 180 DNA repair-related genes in four classical glioblastoma cell lines (U87-MG, U251-MG, D566-MG, T98G) exposed to 5 days of normoxia (21% O-2), moderate (1% O-2) or severe (0.1% O-2) hypoxia. We observed altered gene expression in several DNA repair pathways including homologous recombination repair, non-homologous end-joining and mismatch repair, with hypoxia primarily resulting in downregulation of gene expression. The extent of gene expression changes was dependent on hypoxic severity. Some, but not all, of these downregulations were directly under the control of HIF activity. For example, the downregulation of LIG4, a key component of non-homologous end-joining, was reversed upon inhibition of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF). In contrast, the downregulation of the mismatch repair gene, PMS2, was not affected by HIF inhibition. This suggests that numerous molecular mechanisms lead to hypoxia-induced reprogramming of the transcriptional landscape of DNA repair. Whilst the global impact of hypoxia on DNA repair gene expression is likely to lead to genomic instability, tumorigenesis and reduced sensitivity to anti-cancer treatment, treatment re-sensitising might require additional approaches to a simple HIF inhibition.

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