4.6 Article

Hypoxia, pseudohypoxia and cellular differentiation

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 356, Issue 2, Pages 192-196

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2017.03.007

Keywords

Hypoxia; Pseudo-hypoxia; Neuroblastoma; Breast cancer; Paraganglioma; Pheochromocytoma; De-differentiation; Cancer stem cells

Funding

  1. Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation [TJ2016-0008, TJ2015-0027, PR2015-008, NCp 2016-0015]
  2. Swedish Cancer Society [2015/346]
  3. Swedish Research Council [K2013-66X-08285-38-5]
  4. Fru Berta Kamprad's Foundation
  5. Hans von Kantzow's Foundation
  6. Gyllenstierna Krapperup's Foundation
  7. Royal Physiographic Society in Lund
  8. Gunnar Nilsson's Cancer Foundation
  9. Region Sickle
  10. Skane University Hospital

Ask authors/readers for more resources

w Tumor hypoxia correlates to aggressive disease, and while this is explained by a variety of factors, one clue to understand this phenomena was the finding that hypoxia induces a de-differentiated, stem cell-like phenotype in neuroblastoma and breast tumor cells. The hypoxia inducible transcription factors (HIFs) are regulated at the translational level by fluctuating oxygen concentrations, but emerging data reveal that both HIF-la and HIF-2 alpha expression can be induced by aberrantly activated growth factor signaling independently of oxygen levels. Furthermore, HIF-2 alpha is regulated by hypoxia also at the transcriptional level in neuroblastoma and glioma cells. In cultured tumor cells, HIF-2 alpha is stabilized at physiological oxygen concentrations followed by induced expression of classical hypoxia-driven genes, resulting in a pseudohypoxic phenotype. In addition, in neuroblastoma and glioma specimens, a small subset of HIF-2 alpha positive, HIF-la negative, tumor cells is found adjacent to blood vessels, i.e. in areas with presumably adequate oxygenation. These tumor niches are thus pseudohypoxic, and the HIF-2 alpha expressing cells present immature features. We have postulated that this niche in neuroblastomas encompass the tumor stem cells. Oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes associated with pseudohypoxia are frequently mutated or deleted in the germline, implicating that the pseudohypoxic phenotype indeed is tumorigenic. In summary, the hypoxic and pseudohypoxic phenotypes of solid tumors are attractive therapeutic targets.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available