| Literature DB >> 34359734 |
Anne-Sophie Wozny1,2, Arnaud Gauthier1,2, Gersende Alphonse1,2, Céline Malésys1, Virginie Varoclier1, Michael Beuve3, Delphine Brichart-Vernos1, Nicolas Magné1,4, Nicolas Vial1,4, Dominique Ardail1, Tetsuo Nakajima5, Claire Rodriguez-Lafrasse1,2.
Abstract
Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1α (HIF-1α), which promotes cancer cell survival, is the main regulator of oxygen homeostasis. Hypoxia combined with photon and carbon ion irradiation (C-ions) stabilizes HIF-1α. Silencing HIF-1α under hypoxia leads to substantial radiosensitization of Head-and-Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma (HNSCC) cells after both photons and C-ions. Thus, this study aimed to clarify a potential involvement of HIF-1α in the detection, signaling, and repair of DNA Double-Strand-Breaks (DSBs) in response to both irradiations, in two HNSCC cell lines and their subpopulations of Cancer-Stem Cells (CSCs). After confirming the nucleoshuttling of HIF-1α in response to both exposure under hypoxia, we showed that silencing HIF-1α in non-CSCs and CSCs decreased the initiation of the DSB detection (P-ATM), and increased the residual phosphorylated H2AX (γH2AX) foci. While HIF-1α silencing did not modulate 53BP1 expression, P-DNA-PKcs (NHEJ-c) and RAD51 (HR) signals decreased. Altogether, our experiments demonstrate the involvement of HIF-1α in the detection and signaling of DSBs, but also in the main repair pathways (NHEJ-c and HR), without favoring one of them. Combining HIF-1α silencing with both types of radiation could therefore present a potential therapeutic benefit of targeting CSCs mostly present in tumor hypoxic niches.Entities:
Keywords: DNA repair; cancer stem cells; carbon ions; double-strand breaks; homologous recombination; hypoxia; hypoxia-inducible factor 1; irradiations; non-homologous end joining pathway; photons
Year: 2021 PMID: 34359734 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13153833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639