Low oxygen levels have shown to promote self-renewal in many stem cells. In tumors, hypoxia is associated with aggressive disease course and poor clinical outcomes. Furthermore, many aggressive tumors have shown to display gene expression signatures characteristic of human embryonic stem cells (hESC). We now tested whether hypoxia might be responsible for the hESC signature observed in aggressive tumors. We show that hypoxia, through hypoxia inducible factor (HIF), can induce a hESC-like transcriptional program, including the iPSC inducers, OCT4, NANOG, SOX2, KLF4, cMYC and miRNA-302 in eleven cancer cell lines (from prostate, brain, kidney, cervix, lung, colon, liver and breast tumors). Further, non-degradable forms of HIFα, combined with the traditional iPSC inducers are highly efficient in generating A549 iPSC-like colonies that have high tumorigenic capacity. To test potential correlation between iPSC inducers and HIF expression in primary tumors, we analyzed primary prostate tumors and found a significant correlation between NANOG-, OCT4- and HIF1α-positive regions. Further, NANOG and OCT4 expression positively correlated with increased prostate tumor Gleason score. In primary glioma-derived CD133 negative cells neurospheres and hESC markers were induced in hypoxia but not in normoxia. Together, these findings suggest that HIF targets may act as key inducers of a dynamic state of stemness in pathological conditions.
The late stages of progression of prostate carcinoma are typically characterized by an androgen-insensitive, rapidly proliferative state. Some late-stage tumors are composed predominantly of neuroendocrine cells. Virtually no animal models of a neuroendocrine/small cell variant of prostate carcinoma are available for experimental studies. We report a human neuroendocrine/small cell prostate carcinoma xenograft that was developed from a nodal metastasis of a human prostate carcinoma and that has been propagated as serial subcutaneous implants in severe combined immunodeficient mice for >4 years. Designated LuCaP 49, all tumor passages exhibit a neuroendocrine/small cell carcinoma phenotype-insensitivity to androgen deprivation, expression of neuroendocrine proteins, lack of expression of prostate-specific antigen or androgen receptor, and an unusually rapid growth (a doubling time of 6.5 days) for prostate cancer xenografts. Genetically this tumor exhibits loss of heterozygosity for the short arm of chromosome 8 and has a complex karyotype. This xenograft should prove to be useful in the investigation of mechanisms underlying the androgen-insensitive state of progressive prostate carcinoma.
Phenotype-based screening can identify small molecules that elicit a desired cellular response, but additional approaches are required to characterize their targets and mechanisms of action. Here, we show that a compound termed LCS3, which selectively impairs the growth of human lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) cells, induces oxidative stress. To identify the target that mediates this effect, we use thermal proteome profiling (TPP) and uncover the disulfide reductases GSR and TXNRD1 as targets. We confirm through enzymatic assays that LCS3 inhibits disulfide reductase activity through a reversible, uncompetitive mechanism. Further, we demonstrate that LCS3-sensitive LUAD cells are sensitive to the synergistic inhibition of glutathione and thioredoxin pathways. Lastly, a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen identifies NQO1 loss as a mechanism of LCS3 resistance. This work highlights the ability of TPP to uncover targets of small molecules identified by high-throughput screens and demonstrates the potential therapeutic utility of inhibiting disulfide reductases in LUAD.
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