| Literature DB >> 32928258 |
Mingyao Huang1, Liang Yang1, Xueqiang Peng1, Shibo Wei1, Qing Fan1, Shuo Yang1, Xinyu Li1, Bowen Li1, Hongyuan Jin1, Bo Wu1, Jingang Liu1, Hangyu Li2.
Abstract
Molecular oxygen (O2) is a universal electron acceptor that is eventually synthesized into ATP in the mitochondrial respiratory chain of all metazoans. Therefore, hypoxia biology has become an organizational principle of cell evolution, metabolism and pathology. Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) mediates tumour cells to produce a series of glucose metabolism adaptations including the regulation of glucose catabolism, glycogen metabolism and the biological oxidation of glucose to hypoxia. Since HIF can regulate the energy metabolism of cancer cells and promote the survival of cancer cells, targeting HIF or HIF mediated metabolic enzymes may become one of the potential treatment methods for cancer. In this review, we summarize the established and recently discovered autonomous molecular mechanisms that can induce cell reprogramming of hypoxic glucose metabolism in tumors and explore opportunities for targeted therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Glucose; Hypoxia; Metabolic reprogramming; Tumour
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32928258 PMCID: PMC7491117 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01698-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Activation and degradation of HIFα. Under normoxic conditions, PHD uses 2-OG as a substrate and ascorbic acid and Fe2+ as co-substrates to catalyse the oxygen-dependent hydroxylation (OH) of HIFα (both HIF-1α and HIF-2α). Oxygen-dependent hydroxylation leads to the recognition of HIFα by the pVHL tumour suppressor, which recruits the E3 ubiquitin ligase, resulting in the ubiquitination and protease degradation of HIFα. Under hypoxia, the hydroxylation of HIFα is inhibited, leading to the stabilization of HIFα. HIFα dimerizes with HIF-1β to form a transcriptional activation complex, which binds to the HRE in the promoter region of target genes, inducing their transactivation
Proteins that Promote the Stability of HIF
| Cancer | Protein | Mechanism | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| liver, cervical | Bclaf1 | Myb region of Bclaf1 participates in binding HIF-1α | [ |
| lung | AK4 | increase ROS levels | [ |
| breast | HER2 | / | [ |
| liver | YAP | / | [ |
| breast | FOXA1 | / | [ |
| breast | BRCA1-IRIS | prevents GSK-3β phosphorylation-driven degradation | [ |
| breast | P4HA1 | regulates the levels of 2-OG and succinic acid | [ |
| myeloma | TRIM44 | as a deubiquitinase of HIF-1α | [ |
| colorectal | SOD3 | decreases the activity of HIF-prolyl hydroxylase domain-containing protein | [ |
| pancreatic | β-catenin | extends the half-life of HIF-2α | [ |
| head and neck | GATA3 | / | [ |
Fig. 2Hypoxic HIFα-Dependent Glucose Metabolic Reprogramming. Metabolic pathways illustrating HIFα transcriptional targets under hypoxia in tumor cells. Blue boxes, known HIFα targets. HIFα induces the expression of GLUT1, GLUT3, HK1/2 and LDHA, to increase glucose uptake and lactate formation. HIFα also induces the expression of PDK1, which then negatively regulates the entry of pyruvate to the TCA cycle. In addition, under hypoxic conditions, HIF-1 reduces the activity and respiration of complex I by inducing NDUFA4L2, and induces the expression of several microRNAs (miRNA) including miR-210, which can inhibit the assembly of ETC complex, thereby reducing the activity of ETC.
Fig. 3Sites where hypoxia inhibits ROS production. Hypoxia increases the activity of complexes I and III in tumour cells, limiting the production of ROS. NADPH oxidase can also regulate the production of ROS, which may become a potential site regulated by HIFα
Drugs targeting HIF/HIF mediated metabolic enzymes
| Drug | Target | Tumor | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atorvastatin | HIF-1α | Burkitt’s Lymphoma | [ |
| Oxaliplatin | HIF-1α | Colorectal cancer | [ |
| Tamoxifen | HIF-1α | Breast cancer | [ |
| Trichostatin A | HIF-1α | Cervical cancer | [ |
| Diacetoxyscirpenol | HIF-1α | Liver cancer | [ |
| Metformin | HIF-1α | Breast cancer | [ |
| Metformin | HIF-1α/GLUT, HK2, PKM, LDH | Cervical cancer | [ |
| Ginsenoside Compound K | HIF-1α/PDK1 | Lung cancer | [ |
| Dovitinib | HIF-1α/GLUT | Lung cancer | [ |
| Metformin | HIF-1α/PDH | Oral cancer | [ |
| Cetuximab | HIF-1α/LDHA | Head and neck cancer | [ |
| Troxacitabine | HIF-1α/PGK | Lung cancer | [ |