| Literature DB >> 28619042 |
Eric Leung1,2,3, Rob A Cairns4, Naz Chaudary4, Ravi N Vellanki4, Tuula Kalliomaki4, Eduardo H Moriyama4, Hilda Mujcic4, Brian C Wilson4,3, Bradly G Wouters4,2,3, Richard Hill4,2,3, Michael Milosevic5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A high rate of glycolysis leading to elevated lactate content has been linked to poor clinical outcomes in patients with head and neck and cervical cancer treated with radiotherapy. Although the biological explanation for this relationship between lactate and treatment response remains unclear, there is a continued interest in evaluating strategies of targeting metabolism to enhance the effectiveness of radiotherapy. The goal of this study was to investigate the effect of metabolic-targeting through HIF-1α inhibition and the associated changes in glycolysis, oxygen consumption and response on the efficacy of high-dose single-fraction radiotherapy (HD-SFRT).Entities:
Keywords: Glycolysis; Hif-1α; High-dose single-fraction radiation; Hypoxia; Lactate; Metabolism; Radiation response
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28619042 PMCID: PMC5473006 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3402-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Representative bioluminescence images of ATP in ME180 sections (a,b) and lactate in FaDu sections (c,d), for both HIF-WT (WT) (a, c) and HIF-1α KD (HIF-1 KD) (b, d) tumors under hypoxic conditions (7% oxygen for 3 h). The viable tumor areas (black outline) from the corresponding H&E sections were mapped onto these bioluminescence images for quantification
Fig. 2a and b show Western Blot analysis of HIF-1α protein levels from ME180 HIF-WT (DOX-) and HIF-1 KD (DOX+) cells and FaDu HIF-WT (WT), empty vector control (EV) HIF-1 KD (HIF-1 KD) cells in air (0 h) and 0.2% oxygen (8, 24 h ME180; 24 h FaDu). c shows RTPCR for CAIX, which confirms downstream inhibition of CAIX mRNA transcription following HIF-1 protein knockdown (HKG, housekeeping genes)
Fig. 3In vitro oxygen consumption rates (OCR) and extracellular acidification rates (ECAR) in HIF-WT and HIF-1α KD cells: (top) ME180, (bottom) FaDu
Fig. 4Mean EF5 scores in ME180 and FaDu tumors under air-breathing conditions (a, c) and during 3 h of exposure to 7% O2 breathing conditions (b, d). Error bars represent standard error of the mean
Fig. 5Mean lactate concentration measured using bioluminescence imaging in ME180 and FaDu tumors under air-breathing conditions (a, c) and after exposure to 3 h of 7% O2 breathing conditions (b, d). Error bars represent standard error of the mean
Fig. 6Growth curves for ME180 and FaDu tumors each with and without high-dose radiation (20Gy single fraction) administered on day 0 under air-breathing conditions (a, c) or immediately following exposure to 3 h of 7% O2 breathing (b, d) conditions (n = 4–10 mice per group). The tumor weight in each animal was normalized to its weight at the start of the experiment