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Role of HIF-1alpha in hypoxia-mediated apoptosis, cell proliferation and tumour angiogenesis

Authors :
Carmeliet, P
Dor, Y
Herbert, JM
Fukumura, D
Brusselmans, K
Dewerchin, M
Neeman, M
Bono, F
Abramovitch, R
Maxwell, P
Koch, CJ
Ratcliffe, P
Moons, L
Jain, RK
Collen, D
Keshert, E
Keshet, E
Source :
Nature. 394(6692)
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

As a result of deprivation of oxygen (hypoxia) and nutrients, the growth and viability of cells is reduced. Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha helps to restore oxygen homeostasis by inducing glycolysis, erythropoiesis and angiogenesis. Here we show that hypoxia and hypoglycaemia reduce proliferation and increase apoptosis in wild-type (HIF-1alpha+/+) embryonic stem (ES) cells, but not in ES cells with inactivated HIF-1alpha genes (HIF-1alpha-/-); however, a deficiency of HIF-1alpha does not affect apoptosis induced by cytokines. We find that hypoxia/hypoglycaemia-regulated genes involved in controlling the cell cycle are either HIF-1alpha-dependent (those encoding the proteins p53, p21, Bcl-2) or HIF-1alpha-independent (p27, GADD153), suggesting that there are at least two different adaptive responses to being deprived of oxygen and nutrients. Loss of HIF-1alpha reduces hypoxia-induced expression of vascular endothelial growth factor, prevents formation of large vessels in ES-derived tumours, and impairs vascular function, resulting in hypoxic microenvironments within the tumour mass. However, growth of HIF-1alpha tumours was not retarded but was accelerated, owing to decreased hypoxia-induced apoptosis and increased stress-induced proliferation. As hypoxic stress contributes to many (patho)biological disorders, this new role for HIF-1alpha in hypoxic control of cell growth and death may be of general pathophysiological importance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
394
Issue :
6692
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a630c716c75678c62b961a7bb5a1840f