RESUMEN
Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) has been recognized as an important cancer drug target. Many recent studies have provided convincing evidences of strong correlation between elevated levels of HIF-1 and tumor metastasis, angiogenesis, poor patient prognosis as well as tumor resistance therapy. It was found that hypoxia (low O2 levels) is a common character in many types of solid tumors. As an adaptive response to hypoxic stress, hypoxic tumor cells activate several survival pathways to carry out their essential biological processes in different ways compared with normal cells. Recent advances in cancer biology at the cellular and molecular levels highlighted the HIF-1α pathway as a crucial survival pathway for which novel strategies of cancer therapy could be developed. However, targeting the HIF-1α pathway has been a challenging but promising progresses have been made in the past twenty years. This review summarizes the role and regulation of the HIF-1α in cancer, and recent therapeutic approaches targeting this important pathway.
RESUMEN
Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is one of the most promising pharmacological targets for all types of cancer, including ovarian cancer. Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) has poor prognosis because of its insensitivity to chemotherapy. To elucidate the characteristics of this troublesome cancer, we examined HIF-1α expression under normoxia or hypoxia in various ovarian cancer cell lines. HIF-1α was highly expressed under normoxia only in RMG-1, an OCCC cell line. To examine whether HIF-1 is involved in the tumorigenesis of RMG-1 cells, we established HIF-1α-silenced cells, RMG-1HKD. The proliferation rate of RMG-1HKD cells was faster than that of RMG-1 cells. Furthermore, the activity of MEK/ERK in the Ras pathway increased in RMG-1HKD cells, whereas that of mTOR in the PI3K pathway did not change. Activation of the Ras pathway was attributable to the increase in phosphorylated MEK via PP2A inactivation. To confirm the crosstalk between the PI3K and Ras pathways in vivo, RMG-1 or RMG-1HKD cells were transplanted into the skin of nude mice with rapamycin (an inhibitor of mTOR), PD98059 (an inhibitor of MEK), or both. RMG-1HKD cells showed higher sensitivity to PD98059 than that observed in RMD-1 cells, whereas the combination therapy resulted in synergistic inhibition of both cells. These findings suggest that inhibition of HIF-1, a downstream target of mTOR in the PI3K pathway, activates the Ras pathway on account of the increase in MEK phosphorylation via PP2A inactivation, and the crosstalk between the 2 pathways could be applied in the combination therapy for HIF-1-overexpressing cancers such as OCCC.