Increased expression of hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha in rat and human prostate cancer.
Article 1998 en
Authors
HZ
Hua Zhong
FA
Faton Agani
AB
Angelo A. Baccala
Abstract
1 min read
Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a transcription factor that regulates genes involved in adaptation to hypoxia. Expression of HIF-1alpha was evaluated in rat and human prostate cancer cell lines. Increased expression of HIF-1alpha mRNA in rat prostate cancer cell lines and hypoxia-induced expression of HIF-1alpha protein in human prostate cancer cell lines are associated with increased cell growth rates and metastatic potential. HIF-1alpha mRNA was undetectable in the normal rat ventral prostate by Northern blot hybridization. HIF-1alpha protein expression and HIF-1 DNA binding activity were detected in normoxic PC-3 cells. Human prostate cancer cells plated at low density manifested higher functional HIF-1alpha expression than cells plated at high density independent of O2 tension. HIF-1alpha may become dysregulated in prostate cancer and thus drive the transcription of hypoxia-adaptive genes involved in tumor progression. This is also the first evidence that human cancer cells can express functional HIF-1alpha protein under normoxic conditions.
Hua Zhong, Angelo M. De Marzo, Erik Laughner, Michael Lim, David A. Hilton, David Zagzag, Peter Buechler, William B. Isaacs, Gregg L. Friedman, Jonathan W. Simons
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