Our findings elucidate a mechanism whereby LSD1 controls senescence in Glioblastoma tumor cells through the regulation of HIF-1α, and we propose the novel defined LSD1/HIF-1α axis as a new target for the therapy of Glioblastoma tumors.
Taken together, our data suggest that KDELR2 is a target gene downstream of HIF1-alpha driving the malignancy of GBM and could eventually serve as a therapeutic target for the treatment of GBM patients.
Expression of HIF-1α was measured as a potential target gene of miR-448 in glycolysis.RESULTSmiR-448 was detected and determined to be significantly downregulated in both glioma tissues from glioma patients and GBM cell lines.
Hypoxia plays important roles in the prognosis of malignant brain tumors such as glioblastoma because it causes drug delivery deficiencies and the induction of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α in tumor cells.
Moreover, we demonstrate the existence of a positive correlation between the expression levels of HIF-1α, TCF1 and neuronal phenotype in GBM tumors, accompanied by the over-expression of several Wnt signaling components, finally affecting patient prognosis.
The HIF‑1α/miR‑224‑3p/ATG5 axis affects cell mobility and chemosensitivity by regulating hypoxia‑induced protective autophagy in glioblastoma and astrocytoma.
By promoting the adaptation to non-adherent conditions, mechanisms driven by HIF-1α may considerably contribute to the biology and aggressiveness of glioblastoma.
Hypermethylated gene ANKDD1A is a candidate tumor suppressor that interacts with FIH1 and decreases HIF1α stability to inhibit cell autophagy in the glioblastoma multiforme hypoxia microenvironment.
The aforementioned results demonstrate that hypoxia could induce enhancements of migration and invasion by activating PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway by targeting HIF-1α in human glioblastoma U87 cells, which provide a theoretical basis for the treatments of GBM by targeting the PI3K/Akt/mTOR/HIF-1α pathway.
The expression of FAT1, EMT (Snail/LOX/Vimentin/N-cad), stemness (SOX2/OCT4/Nestin/REST) and hypoxia markers (HIF-1α/VEGF/PGK1/CA9) was upregulated in ≥39% of GBM tumors (n = 31) with significant positive correlation (p ≤ 0.05) of the expression of FAT1 with LOX/Vimentin/SOX2/HIF-1α/PGK1/VEGF/CA9.
The findings of the current study demonstrate presence of the IDH1 R132H mutation in primary human glioblastoma cell lines with upregulated HIF-1α expression, downregulating c-MYC activity and resulting in a consequential decrease in miR-20a, which is responsible for cell proliferation and resistance to standard temozolomide treatment.
Therefore, our findings uncover a hypoxia-induced negative feedback mechanism that maintains high activity of HIF-1 and cell mobility in human glioblastoma.
Our data reported that ASA affected GBM-EC viability, tube-like structure formation, cell migration, and VEGF releasing in a dose-dependent manner and that combined treatments with TMZ, BEV, and SUN synergized to counteract proangiogenic cell ability. mRNA expression analysis displayed a marked effect of ASA in reducing VEGF, VEGFR-1, HIF-1α, RAS, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase, AKT, and BCL-2, as well a combined anticancer effect of ASA together with TMZ, BEV, and SUN.
Our results demonstrate the central role played by HIF-1α activity in determining the sensitivity or resistance of GBMs to TMZ, and we suggest that CMA is the cellular mechanism responsible for modulating this activity after TMZ treatment.
Clinical positron emission tomography studies using radiolabeled Cu-ATSM have shown that Cu-ATSM accumulates in glioblastoma and its uptake is associated with high hypoxia-inducible factor-1α expression.
While HIF1α has been widely studied in cancer, HIF2α offers a potentially more specific and appealing target in glioblastoma given expression in glioma stem cells and not normal neural progenitors, activation in states of chronic hypoxia and expression that correlates with glioma patient survival.
We also found that HIF-2α downregulation sensitized the GBM cells to cisplatin to a greater extent than HIF-1α, whereas CD133 knockdown had a more marked effect on cisplatin sensitisation than knockdown of either one of the HIFs, suggesting the existence of a HIF-independent cisplatin resistance mechanism mediated by CD133.
These findings therefore suggest that N-myc/Sox4-mediated ALK signaling cascades containing Stat3, Akt, HIF-1α, and VEGF-A confer multiple advantages to tumor growth through alterations in neovascularization and cell proliferation in GBMs.
Taken together, these results suggest that DT at clinically achievable concentration functions as an inhibitor of HIF-1α, worthy of further investigations in the therapy of glioblastoma.
Furthermore, Hif-1α upregulated specific protein 1 (SP1) expression in glioblastomas cells in vitro and in vivo, and SP1 also strongly interacted with the H19 promoter to promote H19 expression under hypoxia.