BNIP3 protects HepG2 cells against etoposide-induced cell death under hypoxia by an autophagy-independent pathway

被引:35
作者
Cosse, Jean-Philippe [1 ]
Rommelaere, Guillaume [1 ]
Ninane, Noelle [1 ]
Arnould, Thierry [1 ]
Michiels, Carine [1 ]
机构
[1] FUNDP Univ Namur, NAmur Res Inst Life Sci NARILIS, Lab Biochem & Cellular Biol URBC, B-5000 Namur, Belgium
关键词
Apoptosis; Autophagy; BNIP3; Hypoxia; Cancer cells; MITOCHONDRIAL PERMEABILITY TRANSITION; MALIGNANT GLIOMA-CELLS; BREAST-CANCER CELLS; INDUCED APOPTOSIS; INDUCIBLE FACTOR-1-ALPHA; DRUG-RESISTANCE; GENE-EXPRESSION; UP-REGULATION; SOLID TUMORS; DNA-DAMAGE;
D O I
10.1016/j.bcp.2010.07.009
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
100702 [药剂学];
摘要
Tumor hypoxia is a common characteristic of most solid tumors and is correlated with poor prognosis for patients partly because hypoxia promotes resistance to cancer therapy. Hypoxia selects cancer cells that are resistant to apoptosis and allows the onset of mechanisms that promote cancer cells survival including autophagy. Previously, we showed that human hepatoma HepG2 cells were protected under hypoxia against the etoposide-induced apoptosis. In this study, respective putative contribution of autophagy and BNIP3 in the protection conferred by hypoxia against the etoposide-induced apoptosis was investigated. We report that autophagy is induced by etoposide, a process that is not affected by hypoxic conditions. Using Atg5 siRNA, we show that etoposide-induced autophagy promotes apoptotic cell death under normoxia but not under hypoxia. Then, we investigated whether the hypoxia-induced protein BNIP3 could explain the different effect of autophagy on cell death under hypoxia or normoxia. We show that the silencing of BNIP3 does not affect autophagy whatever the pO(2) but participates in the protective effect of hypoxia against etoposide-induced apoptosis. Together, these results suggest that autophagy might be involved in etoposide-induced cell death only under normoxia and that BNIP3 is a major effector of the protective mechanism conferred by hypoxia to protect cancer cells against etoposide-induced apoptotic cell death. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1160 / 1169
页数:10
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