| Literature DB >> 26786409 |
Jianming Zhang1, Huadan Li1, Zhizhou Huang1, Yangfan He1, Xueqiong Zhou1, Tingyuan Huang1, Peijuan Dai1, Danping Duan1, Xiaojiao Ma1, Qiangbin Yin1, Xiaojie Wang1, Hong Liu1, Size Chen2, Fei Zou3, Xuemei Chen4.
Abstract
Hypoxia stress plays a pivotal role in tumor formation, proliferation, and invasion. Conventional chemotherapy is less effective in the hypoxia microenvironment of solid tumor. Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is an important molecular chaperone in cancer cells and has been a pharmaceutical target for decades. However, Hsp90 inhibitors demonstrate limited effect on solid tumor and the mechanism underlying is not clear. To determine whether hypoxia impairs the therapeutic effect of Hsp90 N-terminal inhibitor, 17-demethoxygeldanamycin hydrochloride (17-DMAG), in live cancer cells, we measured cell proliferation and cell cycle distribution. Cell proliferation assay indicates that hypoxia obviously promotes the proliferation of HepG2 and Huh7 cells after 24, 48, and 72 h and impairs 17-DMAG-induced G2/M arrest in liver cancer cells. As a client protein of Hsp90, cyclin B1 is critical for the transition from G2 to M phase and is related to the prognosis of the patients. We further checked the cyclin B1 messenger RNA (mRNA) level, protein level, ubiquitination of cyclin B1, nuclear translocation, and degradation of cyclin B1 affected by hypoxia after 17-DMAG treatment. The results demonstrate that hypoxia decreases the transcription of cyclin B1 and accelerates the ubiquitination, nuclear translocation, and degradation of cyclin B1. Taken together, our results suggest that hypoxia attenuates cyclin B1 accumulation induced by 17-DMAG and, hence, alleviates 17-DMAG-induced G2/M arrest.Entities:
Keywords: 17-DMAG; Cell cycle arrest; Chemoresistance; Cyclin B1; Hypoxia
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26786409 PMCID: PMC4786521 DOI: 10.1007/s12192-015-0664-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stress Chaperones ISSN: 1355-8145 Impact factor: 3.667
Fig. 1Hypoxia promoted proliferation and chemoresistance to Hsp90 inhibitor 17-DMAG in hepatocellular carcinoma cells. HepG2 and Huh7 cells were grown under normoxia (20 % O2 and 5 % CO2, 37 °C) or hypoxia (1 % O2, 5 % CO2, and 94 % N2, 37 °C). CCK-8 assay was performed according to the manufacturer’s instruction. a Hypoxia effect was confirmed by the increased level of HSF1. b Hypoxia promoted cell proliferation both in HepG2 and in Huh7 cells. c The proliferative inhibition effect of 17-DMAG on HepG2 and Huh7 cells under normoxia and hypoxia after 24-h treatment with 17-DMAG. The inhibition rate was significantly decreased under hypoxia. Data are presented as mean ± SD of three independent experiments (*p < 0.05, hypoxia vs. normoxia)
Fig. 2Hypoxia alleviated 17-DMAG-induced G2/M arrest. Liver cancer cell line HepG2 (a) and HuH7 (b) were treated with increasing concentrations of 17-DMAG (0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 1 μM) for 24 h. Cell cycle distribution was analyzed with flow cytometry. Assays were performed in triplicate. 17-DMAG-induced G2/M arrest was more obvious in normoxia than hypoxia under 0.05, 0.1, and 0.5 μM in both cell lines, except 1 μM 17-DMAG-induced similar G2/M arrest of HuH7 cells in normoxia and hypoxia condition. Data are presented as mean ± SD of three independent experiments (*p < 0.05, hypoxia vs. normoxia)
Fig. 3Hypoxia attenuated the 17-DMAG-induced cyclinB1 accumulation. HepG2 and Huh7 cells were incubated with 17-DMAG at different concentrations for 24 h. a Protein extracts were analyzed by immunoblots for cyclin B1 and p-histone 3 (Ser 10). b The intensities of cyclin B1 bands were analyzed by ImageJ. Data are presented as mean ± SD of three independent experiments (*p < 0.05, hypoxia vs. normoxia)
Fig. 4Hypoxia inhibited transcription of cyclin B1 and accelerated ubiquitination of cyclin B1. a The mRNA levels of cyclinB1 in HepG2 cells under normoxia or hypoxia condition for 24 h were determined by real-time PCR assay. Each experiment was done three separate times (bars, SD; *p < 0.05). b Ubiquitinated cyclin B1 was co-immunoprecipitated with mouse anti-ubiquitin antibody and probed with rabbit anti-cyclin B1 and rabbit anti-ubiquitin antibody. 17-DMAG treatment inhibited the ubiquitination of cyclin B1, and hypoxia abrogated the inhibition of cyclin B1 ubiquitination with 17-DMAG treatment
Fig. 5Hypoxia accelerated nuclear import and consequential degradation of cyclinB1. a HepG2 cells expressing cyclin B1-mCherry were checked by Western blot. b HepG2 cells were synchronized by serum starvation and kept in a cell chamber to mimic normoxia or hypoxia condition. The images were captured every 15 min by time-lapse florescence microscopy. One cell entering mitosis under normoxia or hypoxia treatment is displayed. The results showed that exogenous mCherry-cyclin B1 accumulated more obviously under normoxia in comparison with hypoxia. Furthermore, HepG2 cells under normoxia took longer time (16 h) to translocate and accumulate cyclin B1 into nucleus than hypoxia (8 h). Cyclin B1 rapidly degraded when cyclin B1 translocated from cytoplasm to the nucleus, which indicated the beginning of mitosis. c The time-lapse recording of cyclin B1 intensity was presented by three cells of each normoxia or hypoxia group for total cyclin B1 level (upper panel) or nuclear cyclin B1 level (c, lower panel). The experiments about the cyclin B1 nuclear translocation were repeated three times, and the similar results were observed. The three cells were from the same experiment to minimize the discrepancy caused by different experiments. The changes in the curves indicate that hypoxia accelerated time course for the decrease of total cyclin B1 level and the translocation of cyclin B1 into nucleus