Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) plays a central role in tumor progression by regulating genes involved in proliferation, glycolysis, angiogenesis, and metastasis. To improve our understanding of HIF-1 regulation by kinome, we screened a kinase-specific small interference RNA library using a hypoxia-response element (HRE) luciferase reporter assay under hypoxic conditions. This screen determined that depletion of cellular SMG-1 kinase most significantly modified cellular HIF-1 activity in hypoxia. SMG-1 is the newest and least studied member of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase-related kinase family, which consists of ATM, ATR, DNA-PKcs, mTOR, and SMG-1. We individually depleted members of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase-related kinase family, and only SMG-1 deficiency significantly augmented HIF-1 activity in hypoxia. We subsequently discovered that SMG-1 kinase activity was activated by hypoxia, and depletion of SMG-1 up-regulated MAPK activity under low oxygen. Suppressing cellular MAPK by silencing ERK1/2 or by treatment with U0126, a MAPK inhibitor, partially blocked the escalation of HIF-1 activity resulting from SMG-1 deficiency in hypoxic cells. Increased expression of SMG-1 but not kinase-dead SMG-1 effectively inhibited the activity of HIF-1α. In addition, cellular SMG-1 deficiency increased secretion of the HIF-1α-regulated angiogenic factor, vascular epidermal growth factor, and survival factor, carbonic anhydrase IX (CA9), as well as promoted the hypoxic cell motility. Taken together, we discovered that SMG-1 negatively regulated HIF-1α activity in hypoxia, in part through blocking MAPK activation.

Highlights

  • Solid tumors contain poorly vascularized areas that are hypoxic

  • We found that siRNA-mediated depletion of SMG-1, but not other members of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase-related kinase (PIKK) family, ATM, ATR, DNA-PKcs, and mTOR, markedly increased the Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) activity in hypoxic cancer cells (Fig. 2A)

  • These results confirmed that SMG-1 deficiency increased HIF-1 activity in hypoxia and suggested that cellular SMG-1 activity is critical in suppressing HIF-1 activation in hypoxic cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

Solid tumors contain poorly vascularized areas that are hypoxic. Hypoxic tumor cells are resistant to apoptosis, prone to migrate to less hypoxic regions of the body (metastasis), and produce pro-angiogenic factors to stimulate neovascularization leading to tumor oxygenation and tumor growth [1, 2]. We demonstrate that SMG-1 was activated by hypoxia in cancer cells and suppressed HIF-1␣ activity in part via inhibition of the MAPK pathway, thereby reducing the hypoxia-induced secretion of angiogenic factor, VEGF, and survival factor, CA9, as well as restricting the migration of hypoxic cancer cells.

Results
Conclusion
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