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Impact of Extrinsic and Intrinsic Hypoxia on Catecholamine Biosynthesis in Absence or Presence of Hif2α in Pheochromocytoma Cells.

Authors :
Bechmann, Nicole
Poser, Isabel
Seifert, Verena
Greunke, Christian
Ullrich, Martin
Qin, Nan
Walch, Axel
Peitzsch, Mirko
Robledo, Mercedes
Pacak, Karel
Pietzsch, Jens
Richter, Susan
Eisenhofer, Graeme
Source :
Cancers. May2019, Vol. 11 Issue 5, p594. 1p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) with activated pseudohypoxic pathways are associated with an immature catecholamine phenotype and carry a higher risk for metastasis. For improved understanding of the underlying mechanisms we investigated the impact of hypoxia and pseudohypoxia on catecholamine biosynthesis in pheochromocytoma cells naturally lacking Hif2α (MPC and MTT) or expressing both Hif1α and Hif2α (PC12). Cultivation under extrinsic hypoxia or in spheroid culture (intrinsic hypoxia) increased cellular dopamine and norepinephrine contents in all cell lines. To distinguish further between Hif1α- and Hif2α-driven effects we expressed Hif2α in MTT and MPC-mCherry cells (naturally lacking Hif2α). Presence of Hif2α resulted in similarly increased cellular dopamine and norepinephrine under hypoxia as in the control cells. Furthermore, hypoxia resulted in enhanced phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). A specific knockdown of Hif1α in PC12 diminished these effects. Pseudohypoxic conditions, simulated by expression of Hif2α under normoxia resulted in increased TH phosphorylation, further stimulated by extrinsic hypoxia. Correlations with PPGL tissue data led us to conclude that catecholamine biosynthesis under hypoxia is mainly mediated through increased phosphorylation of TH, regulated as a short-term response (24–48 h) by HIF1α. Continuous activation of hypoxia-related genes under pseudohypoxia leads to a HIF2α-mediated phosphorylation of TH (permanent status). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136750949
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11050594