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Penn Researchers Discover Second Molecular Pathway
that Promotes Cell Survival During Low Oxygen Conditions
Findings Give Clues to Cancer, Cardiovascular Disease Physiology
(Philadelphia, PA) - Researchers at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have identified a second molecular
pathway that promotes cell survival in low-oxygen conditions. By teasing
apart the details of cellular adaptation during oxygen deprivation, or
hypoxia, the researchers hope to gain a better understanding of the abnormal
hypoxic environments that are characteristic of many diseases, including
solid-tumor cancers and stroke.
Oxygen sensing, the ability of a cell to gauge the oxygen concentrations
in its environment and to protect itself through internal regulation,
is a fundamental process in most species of animals that depend entirely
on oxygen to maintain cellular function. There are multiple, oxygen-dependent
pathways in the cell that are regulated by changes in oxygen levels.
By starving human cells of oxygen, Celeste Simon, PhD,
Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at Penn and a Howard Hughes
Medical Institute (HHMI) Investigator, and colleagues discovered an oxygen-sensitive
cellular pathway that leads to a decrease in protein synthesis. This finding
is the second hypoxic cellular pathway to be identified by this research
team. Simon, who is also a member of Penn’s Abramson Cancer
Center, and colleagues report their most recent findings in the
February issue of Molecular Cell.
In order to promote cellular adaptations to hypoxia, the cell must first
recognize the presence of a low-oxygen environment. Previous genetic studies
from Simon’s laboratory helped to establish that the mitochondria-the
energy center of the cell-play a major role in oxygen sensing. Like an
alarm, mitochondria alert the cells when oxygen levels fall too low, resulting
in hypoxic cells activating a protein called hypoxia-inducible factor
(HIF). HIF, in turn, signals for physiological changes in nearby tissue
that serve to protect oxygen-deprived cells. These changes include an
increase in the number of red blood cells and blood vessels, the dilation
of vessels, and changes in cell motility.
“These physiological changes make biological sense,” explains
Simon. “The changes allow the affected cell, or tissue, to withstand
the stress of low oxygen. Changes in the blood cells and vasculature enhance
the ability of the blood stream to carry oxygen to the effected regions.”
In their most recent studies, Simon’s group revealed the ability
of cells to adapt to low-oxygen concentrations through a second molecular
pathway. In order to protect itself during hypoxic conditions, a cell
will conserve energy by greatly reducing protein synthesis. By exposing
human cells to low-oxygen conditions, the researchers observed the inactivation
of mTOR, a central regulator of global protein synthesis. Further genetic
testing revealed that the mTOR pathway operates independent of the HIF
pathway.
Though paradoxical, Simon’s findings suggest that the HIF pathway
leads to the activation and translation of nearly 200 target genes essential
to the cell’s protective physiological changes, while the second
and most recently discovered pathway-the mTOR pathway-inhibits protein
synthesis. “The cell needs to take what energy it has to redirect
to the molecular response that results in the necessary physiological
changes,” Simon suggests.
“There is something about the messenger RNAs present in the HIF
pathway that allows them to escape inhibition of global protein synthesis,”
Simon notes. She believes that the directions for these mRNAs to move
forward and make protein, while many are left behind, lies in the genetic
makeup of mRNA. Her lab is currently working to identify these molecular
directions.
Although hypoxic conditions exist throughout early embryonic development,
the presence of hypoxic environments in adult tissue is often a response
to disease. As Simon explains, “A lot of the major Western world
scourges involve a decrease in oxygen availability that falls below the
threshold that cells need to remain healthy and carry out their functions.”
Hypoxia is a prominent component of solid tumors, myocardial infarctions,
stroke, diabetic retinopathy, inflammation, and atherosclerosis.
In addition to hypoxia, solid cancer tumors are comprised of abnormal
cells and convoluted blood vessels, which allow the tumors to resist chemotherapy
and radiation treatments. New treatments for cancer are now aiming to
turn off HIF and mTOR activity, halting the ability of the cell to signal
its low-oxygen alert system and undergo protein synthesis.
“If we are able to create a treatment for tumors by inactivating
the factor that is promoting cell survival and tumor cell motility - a
key regulator of tumor metastasis - we may have another option to treat
solid tumors,” notes Simon.
Study co-authors are Liping Liu, Timothy P. Cash, Russell G. Jones, Brian
Keith and Craig B. Thompson, all from the Abramson Family Cancer Research
Institute (AFCRI). The research was funded by the National Institutes
of Health, HHMI, and AFCRI.
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