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Acute and chronic hypoxia differentially predispose lungs for metastases

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Reiterer, Moritz 
Colaço, Renato 
Emrouznejad, Pardis 
Jensen, Anders 

Abstract

Abstract: Oscillations in oxygen levels affect malignant cell growth, survival, and metastasis, but also somatic cell behaviour. In this work, we studied the effect of the differential expression of the two primary hypoxia inducible transcription factor isoforms, HIF-1α and HIF-2α, and pulmonary hypoxia to investigate how the hypoxia response of the vascular endothelium remodels the lung pre-metastatic niche. Molecular responses to acute versus chronic tissue hypoxia have been proposed to involve dynamic HIF stabilization, but the downstream consequences and the extent to which differential lengths of exposure to hypoxia can affect HIF-isoform activation and secondary organ pre-disposition for metastasis is unknown. We used primary pulmonary endothelial cells and mouse models with pulmonary endothelium-specific deletion of HIF-1α or HIF-2α, to characterise their roles in vascular integrity, inflammation and metastatic take after acute and chronic hypoxia. We found that acute hypoxic response results in increased lung metastatic tumours, caused by HIF-1α-dependent endothelial cell death and increased microvascular permeability, in turn facilitating extravasation. This is potentiated by the recruitment and retention of specific myeloid cells that further support a pro-metastatic environment. We also found that chronic hypoxia delays tumour growth to levels similar to those seen in normoxia, and in a HIF-2α-specific fashion, correlating with increased endothelial cell viability and vascular integrity. Deletion of endothelial HIF-2α rendered the lung environment more vulnerable to tumour cell seeding and growth. These results demonstrate that the nature of the hypoxic challenge strongly influences the nature of the endothelial cell response, and affects critical parameters of the pulmonary microenvironment, significantly impacting metastatic burden. Additionally, this work establishes endothelial cells as important players in lung remodelling and metastatic progression.

Description

Keywords

Article, /631/67/322, /692/4028/67/322, /13/1, /13/2, /13/21, /13/31, /13/106, /14/1, /14/19, /14/34, /14/63, /38/77, /38, /64/60, /82/29, /82/51, /14, /82/83, /82/80, article

Journal Title

Scientific Reports

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2045-2322

Volume Title

9

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK
Sponsorship
Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (RG86108)
Wellcome Trust (Wellcome) (WT092738MA)
Breast Cancer Now (BCN) (2014MaySF275)