The antitumorigenic activity of antioxidants has been presumed to arise from their ability to squelch DNA damage and genomic instability mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Here, we report that antioxidants inhibited three tumorigenic models in vivo. Inhibition of a MYC-dependent human B lymphoma model was unassociated with genomic instability but was linked to diminished hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1 levels in a prolyl hydroxylase 2 and von Hippel-Lindau protein-dependent manner. Ectopic expression of an oxygen-independent, stabilized HIF-1 mutant rescued lymphoma xenografts from inhibition by two antioxidants: N-acetylcysteine and vitamin C. These findings challenge the paradigm that antioxidants diminish tumorigenesis primarily through decreasing DNA damage and mutations and provide significant support for a key antitumorigenic effect of diminishing HIF levels.
Stem cell factor (SCF)/c-kit plays an important role in the regulation of hematopoiesis, melanogenesis, and spermatogenesis. In the testis, the SCF/c-kit system is believed to regulate germ cell proliferation, meiosis, and apoptosis. Studies with type A spermatogonia in vivo and in vitro have indicated that SCF induces DNA synthesis and proliferation. However, the signaling pathway for this function of SCF/c-kit has not been elucidated. We now demonstrate that SCF activates phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K) and p70 S6 kinase (p70S6K) and that rapamycin, a FRAP/mammalian target of rapamycin-dependent inhibitor of p70S6K, completely inhibited bromodeoxyuridine incorporation induced by SCF in primary cultures of spermatogonia. SCF induced cyclin D3 expression and phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein through a pathway that is sensitive to both wortmannin and rapamycin. Furthermore, AKT, but not protein kinase C-, is used by SCF/ckit/PI3-K to activate p70S6K. Dominant negative AKT-K179M completely abolished p70S6K phosphorylation induced by the constitutively active PI3-K catalytic subunit p110. Constitutively active v-AKT highly phosphorylated p70S6K, which was totally inhibited by rapamycin. Thus, SCF/c-kit uses a rapamycin-sensitive PI3-K/AKT/p70S6K/cyclin D3 pathway to promote spermatogonial cell proliferation.
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