| Literature DB >> 34257622 |
Anna Sebestyén1, László Kopper1, Titanilla Dankó1, József Tímár2.
Abstract
Cancer hypoxia, recognized as one of the most important hallmarks of cancer, affects gene expression, metabolism and ultimately tumor biology-related processes. Major causes of cancer hypoxia are deficient or inappropriate vascularization and systemic hypoxia of the patient (frequently induced by anemia), leading to a unique form of genetic reprogramming by hypoxia induced transcription factors (HIF). However, constitutive activation of oncogene-driven signaling pathways may also activate hypoxia signaling independently of oxygen supply. The consequences of HIF activation in tumors are the angiogenic phenotype, a novel metabolic profile and the immunosuppressive microenvironment. Cancer hypoxia and the induced adaptation mechanisms are two of the major causes of therapy resistance. Accordingly, it seems inevitable to combine various therapeutic modalities of cancer patients by existing anti-hypoxic agents such as anti-angiogenics, anti-anemia therapies or specific signaling pathway inhibitors. It is evident that there is an unmet need in cancer patients to develop targeted therapies of hypoxia to improve efficacies of various anti-cancer therapeutic modalities. The case has been opened recently due to the approval of the first-in-class HIF2α inhibitor.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cancer; hypoxia; metabolism; therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34257622 PMCID: PMC8262153 DOI: 10.3389/pore.2021.1609802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathol Oncol Res ISSN: 1219-4956 Impact factor: 3.201
FIGURE 1Necrosis in cancer. (A). Macroscopic picture of hemorrhagic necrosis in liver cancer; (B). Microscopic picture of necrosis in renal cell cancer (HE staining). C = capillary, H = hypoxic area, N = necrotic area.
Comparison of oxygenation levels in cancer and host tissues. [1].
| Cancer | % O2 | Host tissue | % O2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lung cancer | 2.2 | Renal cortex | 9.5 |
| Rectal adenocarcinoma | 1.8 | Breast tissue | 8.5 |
| Glial tumors | 1.7 | Pancreatic tissue | 7.5 |
| Breast adenocarcinoma | 1.5 | Liver | 7.3 |
| Renal cell cancer | 1.3 | Lung | 5.6 |
| Cervical squamous cell cancer | 1.2 | Uterine cervix | 5.5 |
| Hepatocellular cancer | 0.8 | Brain | 4.6 |
| Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | 0.3 | Rectal tissue | 3.9 |
For individual references see [1].
FIGURE 2Schematic presentation of cancer growth beyond 1 mm3: oxygen and nutrient diffusion distances.
FIGURE 3Molecular mechanisms of activation of HIFα transcription factors. HRE = hypoxia-responsive element in the promoter region of specific genes. Effect of constitutive oncogenic activation on HIFα. Proteasomal degradation is inhibited by mTOR or ERK activity, even in the presence of sufficient oxygen levels.
Classical HIF1A regulated genes based on key publications [6, 9].
| ADM | CDKN1A | FLT1 | LDHA | PKM | TPI1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AK3 | CITED2 | GAPDH | MDR1/ABCB1 | SERPINE1 | VEGFA |
| ALDOA | CP | HK1/2 | NOS2 | SLCA1/3 | |
| ALDOC | EDN1 | HMOX1 | P4HA2 | TF | |
| BNIP3 | ENO1 | IGF2 | PFKL | TFRC | |
| CAIX | EPO | IGFBP1/2/3 | PGK1 | TGFB3 |
FIGURE 4Demonstration of intratumoral microvasculature in breast cancer. (A). Detection of VEGF in tumor cells by immunohistochemistry (pink color); (B). Neo-angiogenesis in breast cancer tissue: demonstration of intratumoral blood vessels by immunohistochemical labeling of CD31 positive endothelial cells (pink color) BAR = 100 μm.
FIGURE 5Effects of HIF1α on the metabolic rearrangement. Without going into details, enzymes and processes which can be controlled and/or associated with glycolytic phenotype during metabolic rearrangement by HIF1α (regulation). Beside the effects on HIF1α targets involved in metabolic, glycolytic rearrangement (narrow red arrow), the most frequent and significant metabolic shifts (thick red arrow) are also presented in the figure.
Clinical use of antiangiogenic drugs [33, 34].
| Drug type | Molecular target | Clinical use | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ligand inhibitors | |||
| Bevacizumab | Monoclonal antibody | VEGF-A | RCC, GBL, OEC, CRC, LUAD, CeC, BC |
| Ziv-Aflibercept | Recombinant peptide | VEGF-A/B, PIGF, VEGF-C/D | CRC |
| Receptor inhibitor (ECD) | |||
| Ramucirumab | Monoclonal antibody | VEGFR2 | CRC, LUAD, GaC |
| Kinase inhibitors | |||
| Sunitinib | Small molecular inhibitor | VEGFR1/2/3 PDGFRβ, KIT, RET | RCC |
| Sorafenib | „ | VEGFR1/2/3 PDGFR, KIT, RET, RAF | RCC, HCC |
| Pazopanib | „ | VEGFR1/2, FGFR, KIT | RCC, STS |
| Axitinib | „ | VEGFR1/2/3 | RCC |
| Regorafenib | „ | VEGFR, PDGFR, FGFR, TIE2, RAF, KIT | CRC, HCC |
| Cabozantinib | „ | VEGFR, TIE2, MET, RET | RCC, HCC |
BC, breast cancer; CeC, cervical cancer; CRC, colorectal cancer; ECD, extracellular domain; GaC, gastric cancer; GBL, glioblastoma; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; LUAD, lung adenocarcinoma; OEC, ovarian epithelial cancer; RCC, renal cell cancer; STS, soft tissue sarcoma.
Approved combinatorial therapies of anti-angiogenic agents and immune checkpoint inhibitors.
| Tumor | Anti-PD1 Ab | Anti-PDL1 Ab | Anti-VEGF Ab | Anti-angiogenic TKi | Combination approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LUAD | — | Atezolizumab | Bevacizumab | — | + |
| HCC | — | Atezolizumab | Bevacizumab | — | + |
| RCC | Pembrolizumab | — | — | Axitinib | + |
| Nivolumab | — | — | Axitinib | + | |
| — | Avelumab | — | Cabozantinib | + |
Ab, antibody; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; LUAD, lung adenocarcinoma; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; TKi, tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Targeted therapies of HIF in cancer.
| Mechanism | Target | Agent | Preclinical | Clinical | Tumor Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIFα RNA expression | HIF1α | Antisense | + | − | Various |
| HIF2α | sh-RNA | + | − | Various | |
| HIF1α | ZnSO4 | + | − | Melanoma | |
| HIFα protein synthesis | HIF1α | Digoxin | + | − | Various |
| HIF2α | 2-ME | + | − | Various | |
| Topotecan | + | − | Various | ||
| HIFα stabilization | HIFα | HSP-90 inhibitor | + | + | BRC |
| mTOR | Everolimus | + | + | RCC | |
| Temsirolimus | + | + | BRC | ||
| Direct HIFα inhibitors | HIF1α | Acryflavine | + | − | Various |
| YC-1 | + | − | Various | ||
| HIF2α | PT2385 | + | + | Various | |
| HIF2α | MK6482 | + | + | VHL syndrome related tumors | |
| DNA binding | HRE | Echinomycin | + | − | Various |
BRC, breast cancer; HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor; HRE, HIF-responsive element; RCC, renal cell cancer; sh-RNA, short hairpin RNA; VHL, von-hippel lindau.
Grey shade: FDA approvals.
FIGURE 6Metabolic symbiosis–optimizing the available energy sources. Tumorous and other non-tumorous cells derived from microenvironment utilize the nutrients in harmony with the oxygen concentration (via the regulating role of HIF1α). Accordingly, not only the glycolysis, but also the reverse Warburg effect–in a well-oxygenated environment–provide adaptation capacity/opportunity for cancerous cells.