Hypoxic Memory Mediates Prolonged Tumor-Intrinsic Type I Interferon Suppression to Promote Breast Cancer Progression.

IF 12.5 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY Cancer research Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-2028
Oihana Iriondo, Desirea Mecenas, Yilin Li, Christopher R Chin, Amal Thomas, Aidan Moriarty, Rebecca Marker, Yiru J Wang, Haley Hendrick, Yonatan Amzaleg, Veronica Ortiz, Matthew MacKay, Amber Dickerson, Grace Lee, Sevana Harotoonian, Bérénice A Benayoun, Andrew Smith, Christopher E Mason, Evanthia T Roussos Torres, Remi Klotz, Min Yu
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Abstract

Hypoxia is a common feature of many solid tumors due to aberrant proliferation and angiogenesis that is associated with tumor progression and metastasis. Most of the well-known hypoxia effects are mediated through hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF). Identification of the long-lasting effects of hypoxia beyond the immediate HIF-induced alterations could provide a better understanding of hypoxia-driven metastasis and potential strategies to circumvent it. Here, we uncovered a hypoxia-induced mechanism that exerts a prolonged effect to promote metastasis. In breast cancer patient-derived circulating tumor cell lines and common breast cancer cell lines, hypoxia downregulated tumor-intrinsic type I IFN signaling and its downstream antigen presentation (AP) machinery in luminal breast cancer cells, via both HIF-dependent and HIF-independent mechanisms. Hypoxia induced durable IFN/AP suppression in certain cell types that was sustained after returning to normoxic conditions, presenting a "hypoxic memory" phenotype. Hypoxic memory of IFN/AP downregulation was established by specific hypoxic priming, and cells with hypoxic memory had an enhanced ability for tumorigenesis and metastasis. Overexpression of IRF3 enhanced IFN signaling and reduced tumor growth in normoxic, but not hypoxic, conditions. The histone deacetylase inhibitor entinostat upregulated IFN targets and erased the hypoxic memory. These results point to a mechanism by which hypoxia facilitates tumor progression through a long-lasting memory that provides advantages for circulating tumor cells during the metastatic cascade. Significance: Long-term cellular memory of hypoxia leads to sustained suppression of tumor-intrinsic type I IFN signaling and the antigen presentation pathway that facilitates tumorigenesis and metastasis. See related commentary by Purdy and Ford, p. 3125.

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缺氧记忆介导肿瘤内在 I 型干扰素长期抑制,促进乳腺癌进展
缺氧是许多实体瘤的共同特征,这是因为异常增殖和血管生成与肿瘤进展和转移有关。大多数众所周知的缺氧效应都是通过缺氧诱导因子(HIFs)介导的。除了 HIF 诱导的直接改变之外,鉴定低氧的长期效应可以更好地了解低氧驱动的转移和潜在的规避策略。在这里,我们发现了一种缺氧诱导的机制,它能产生促进转移的长期效应。在乳腺癌患者衍生的循环肿瘤细胞(CTC)系和普通乳腺癌细胞系中,缺氧通过HIF依赖性和HIF非依赖性机制下调了管腔乳腺癌细胞中肿瘤固有的I型干扰素(IFN)信号转导及其下游的抗原呈递(AP)机制。缺氧在某些细胞类型中诱导了持久的 IFN/AP 抑制,这种抑制在恢复正常缺氧条件后仍能持续,呈现出一种 "缺氧记忆 "表型。IFN/AP下调的缺氧记忆是通过特定的缺氧引物建立的,具有缺氧记忆的细胞具有更强的肿瘤发生和转移能力。IRF3的过表达增强了IFN信号转导,并减少了肿瘤在常氧条件下的生长,而不是缺氧条件下的生长。组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂(HDACi)恩替诺司他能上调IFN靶点并消除缺氧记忆。这些结果表明了缺氧通过持久记忆促进肿瘤进展的机制,这种记忆在转移过程中为 CTCs 提供了优势。
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来源期刊
Cancer research
Cancer research 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
16.10
自引率
0.90%
发文量
7677
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: Cancer Research, published by the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), is a journal that focuses on impactful original studies, reviews, and opinion pieces relevant to the broad cancer research community. Manuscripts that present conceptual or technological advances leading to insights into cancer biology are particularly sought after. The journal also places emphasis on convergence science, which involves bridging multiple distinct areas of cancer research. With primary subsections including Cancer Biology, Cancer Immunology, Cancer Metabolism and Molecular Mechanisms, Translational Cancer Biology, Cancer Landscapes, and Convergence Science, Cancer Research has a comprehensive scope. It is published twice a month and has one volume per year, with a print ISSN of 0008-5472 and an online ISSN of 1538-7445. Cancer Research is abstracted and/or indexed in various databases and platforms, including BIOSIS Previews (R) Database, MEDLINE, Current Contents/Life Sciences, Current Contents/Clinical Medicine, Science Citation Index, Scopus, and Web of Science.
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