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SMARCB1 regulates the hypoxic stress response in sickle cell trait

Authors :
Soeung, Melinda
Perelli, Luigi
Chen, Ziheng
Dondossola, Eleonora
Ho, I-Lin
Carbone, Federica
Zhang, Li
Khan, Hania
Le, Courtney N
Zhu, Cihui
Peoples, Michael D
Feng, Ningping
Jiang, Shan
Zacharias, Niki Millward
Minelli, Rosalba
Shapiro, Daniel D
Deem, Angela K
Gao, Sisi
Cheng, Emily H
Lucchetti, Donatella
Walker, Cheryl L
Carugo, Alessandro
Giuliani, Virginia
Heffernan, Timothy P
Viale, Andrea
Tannir, Nizar M
Draetta, Giulio F
Msaouel, Pavlo
Genovese, Giannicola
Lucchetti, Donatella (ORCID:0000-0001-8147-0079)
Soeung, Melinda
Perelli, Luigi
Chen, Ziheng
Dondossola, Eleonora
Ho, I-Lin
Carbone, Federica
Zhang, Li
Khan, Hania
Le, Courtney N
Zhu, Cihui
Peoples, Michael D
Feng, Ningping
Jiang, Shan
Zacharias, Niki Millward
Minelli, Rosalba
Shapiro, Daniel D
Deem, Angela K
Gao, Sisi
Cheng, Emily H
Lucchetti, Donatella
Walker, Cheryl L
Carugo, Alessandro
Giuliani, Virginia
Heffernan, Timothy P
Viale, Andrea
Tannir, Nizar M
Draetta, Giulio F
Msaouel, Pavlo
Genovese, Giannicola
Lucchetti, Donatella (ORCID:0000-0001-8147-0079)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Renal medullary carcinoma (RMC) is an aggressive kidney cancer that almost exclusively develops in individuals with sickle cell trait (SCT) and is always characterized by loss of the tumor suppressor SMARCB1. Because renal ischemia induced by red blood cell sickling exacerbates chronic renal medullary hypoxia in vivo, we investigated whether the loss of SMARCB1 confers a survival advantage under the setting of SCT. Hypoxic stress, which naturally occurs within the renal medulla, is elevated under the setting of SCT. Our findings showed that hypoxia-induced SMARCB1 degradation protected renal cells from hypoxic stress. SMARCB1 wild-type renal tumors exhibited lower levels of SMARCB1 and more aggressive growth in mice harboring the SCT mutation in human hemoglobin A (HbA) than in control mice harboring wild-type human HbA. Consistent with established clinical observations, SMARCB1-null renal tumors were refractory to hypoxia-inducing therapeutic inhibition of angiogenesis. Further, reconstitution of SMARCB1 restored renal tumor sensitivity to hypoxic stress in vitro and in vivo. Together, our results demonstrate a physiological role for SMARCB1 degradation in response to hypoxic stress, connect the renal medullary hypoxia induced by SCT with an increased risk of SMARCB1-negative RMC, and shed light into the mechanisms mediating the resistance of SMARCB1-null renal tumors against angiogenesis inhibition therapies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1439663474
Document Type :
Electronic Resource