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Non-canonical HIF-1 stabilization contributes to intestinal tumorigenesis.

Nadine Rohwer ,
Sandra Jumpertz ,
Merve Erdem ,
Antje Egners ,
Klaudia T Warzecha ,
Athanassios Fragoulis ,
Anja A Kühl ,
Rafael Kramann ,
Sabine Neuss ,
Ines Rudolph ,
Tobias Endermann ,
Christin Zasada ,
Ivayla Apostolova ,
Marco Gerling ,
Stefan Kempa ,
Russell Hughes ,
Claire E Lewis ,
Winfried Brenner ,
Maciej B Malinowski ,
Martin Stockmann ,
Lutz Schomburg ,
William Faller ,
Owen J Sansom ,
Frank Tacke ,
Markus Morkel ,
Thorsten Cramer

Abstract

The hypoxia-inducible transcription factor HIF-1 is appreciated as a promising target for cancer therapy. However, conditional deletion of HIF-1 and HIF-1 target genes in cells of the tumor microenvironment can result in accelerated tumor growth, calling for a detailed characterization of the cellular context to fully comprehend HIF-1's role in tumorigenesis. We dissected cell type-specific functions of HIF-1 for intestinal tumorigenesis by lineage-restricted deletion of the Hif1a locus. Intestinal epithelial cell-specific Hif1a loss reduced activation of Wnt/β-catenin, tumor-specific metabolism and inflammation, significantly inhibiting tumor growth. Deletion of Hif1a in myeloid cells reduced the expression of fibroblast-activating factors in tumor-associated macrophages resulting in decreased abundance of tumor-associated fibroblasts (TAF) and robustly reduced tumor formation. Interestingly, hypoxia was detectable only sparsely and without spatial association with HIF-1α, arguing for an importance of hypoxia-independent, i.e., non-canonical, HIF-1 stabilization for intestinal tumorigenesis that has not been previously appreciated. This adds a further layer of complexity to the regulation of HIF-1 and suggests that hypoxia and HIF-1α stabilization can be uncoupled in cancer. Collectively, our data show that HIF-1 is a pivotal pro-tumorigenic factor for intestinal tumor formation, controlling key oncogenic programs in both the epithelial tumor compartment and the tumor microenvironment.

More about this publication

Oncogene

Volume 38
Issue nr. 28
Pages 5670-5685
Publication date 01-07-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41388-019-0816-4
Europe PubMed Central 31043706
Pubmed 31043706

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