Prevention of hypoxia by myoglobin expression in human tumor cells promotes differentiation and inhibits metastasis

被引:74
作者
Galluzzo, Maria [1 ]
Pennacchietti, Selma [1 ]
Rosano, Stefania [1 ]
Comoglio, Paolo M. [1 ]
Michieli, Paolo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Turin, Sch Med, Inst Canc Res & Treatment, Lab Expt Therapy, I-10060 Turin, Italy
关键词
LENTIVIRAL VECTORS; GENE-TRANSFER; SOLID TUMORS; MICROENVIRONMENT; HEMOGLOBIN; THERAPY; GROWTH; NORMALIZATION; ACTIVATION; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.1172/JCI36579
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
100103 [病原生物学]; 100218 [急诊医学];
摘要
As a tumor grows, it requires increased amounts of oxygen. However, the tumor blood vessels that form to meet this demand are functionally impaired, leading to regions of hypoxia within the tumor. Such hypoxia is one of the hallmarks of malignancy and is thought to promote a number of tumorigenic properties. Here, we sought to determine how tumors without hypoxia would progress by engineering A549 human lung carcinoma cells to ectopically express myoglobin (Mb), a multifunctional heme protein that specializes in oxygen transport, storage, and:buffering. Mb expression prevented the hypoxic response in vitro and delayed tumor engraftment and reduced tumor growth following xenotransplantation into mice. Experimental tumors expressing Mb displayed reduced or no hypoxia, minimal HIF-1 alpha levels, and a homogeneously low vessel density. Mb-mediated tumor oxygenation promoted differentiation of cancer cells and suppressed both local and distal metastatic spreading. These effects were primarily due to reduced tumor hypoxia, because they were not observed using point-mutated forms of myoglobin unable to bind oxygen and they were abrogated by expression of a constitutively active form of HIF-1 alpha. Although limited to xenograft models, these data provide experimental proof of the concept that hypoxia is not just a side effect of deregulated growth but a key factor on which the tumor relies in order to promote its own expansion.
引用
收藏
页码:865 / 875
页数:11
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]
ROLES OF PROXIMAL LIGAND IN HEME-PROTEINS - REPLACEMENT OF PROXIMAL HISTIDINE OF HUMAN MYOGLOBIN WITH CYSTEINE AND TYROSINE BY SITE-DIRECTED MUTAGENESIS AS MODELS FOR P-450, CHLOROPEROXIDASE, AND CATALASE [J].
ADACHI, S ;
NAGANO, S ;
ISHIMORI, K ;
WATANABE, Y ;
MORISHIMA, I ;
EGAWA, T ;
KITAGAWA, T ;
MAKINO, R .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1993, 32 (01) :241-252
[2]
Hypoxia-induced dedifferentiation of tumor cells -: A mechanism behind heterogeneity and aggressiveness of solid tumors [J].
Axelson, H ;
Fredlund, E ;
Ovenberger, M ;
Landberg, G ;
Påhlman, S .
SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2005, 16 (4-5) :554-563
[3]
Mitochondrial oxygen sensing: regulation of hypoxia-inducible factor by mitochondrial generated reactive oxygen species [J].
Bell, Eric L. ;
Chandel, Navdeep S. .
OXYGEN SENSING AND HYPOXIA-INDUCED RESPONSES, 2007, 43 :17-27
[4]
Alterations in DNA repair gene expression under hypoxia -: Elucidating the mechanisms of hypoxia-induced genetic instability [J].
Bindra, RS ;
Schaffer, PJ ;
Meng, A ;
Woo, J ;
Måseide, K ;
Roth, ME ;
Lizardi, P ;
Hedley, DW ;
Bristow, RG ;
Glazer, PM .
TUMOR PROGRESSION AND THERAPEUTIC RESISTANCE, 2005, 1059 :184-195
[5]
Hypoxia and cancer [J].
Brahimi-Horn, M. Christiane ;
Chiche, Johanna ;
Pouyssegur, Jacques .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM, 2007, 85 (12) :1301-1307
[6]
Myoglobin content and oxygen diffusion: Model analysis of horse and steer muscle [J].
Conley, KE ;
Jones, C .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 271 (06) :C2027-C2036
[7]
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for malignancy: A review [J].
Daruwalla, Jurstine ;
Christophi, Chris .
WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2006, 30 (12) :2112-2131
[8]
Mechanism of NO-induced oxidation of myoglobin and hemoglobin [J].
Eich, RF ;
Li, TS ;
Lemon, DD ;
Doherty, DH ;
Curry, SR ;
Aitken, JF ;
Mathews, AJ ;
Johnson, KA ;
Smith, RD ;
Phillips, GN ;
Olson, JS .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1996, 35 (22) :6976-6983
[9]
Recombinant human erythropoietin in oncology: current status and further developments [J].
Engert, A .
ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2005, 16 (10) :1584-1595
[10]
Myoglobin:: A scavenger of bioactive NO [J].
Flögel, U ;
Merx, MW ;
Gödecke, A ;
Decking, UKM ;
Schrader, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2001, 98 (02) :735-740