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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

HIF-1–Dependent Stromal Adaptation to Ischemia Mediates In Vivo Tumor Radiation Resistance

TLDR
The results illustrate that tumor radioresistance is mediated by a capacity to compensate for stromal vascular disruption through HIF-1–dependent proangiogenic signaling and that clinically relevant vascular imaging techniques can spatially define mechanisms associated with tumor irradiation.
Abstract
Purpose: Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) promotes cancer cell survival and tumor progression. The specific role played by HIF-1 and tumor–stromal interactions toward determining tumor resistance to radiation treatment remains undefined. We applied a multimodality preclinical imaging platform to mechanistically characterize tumor response to radiation, with a focus on HIF-1–dependent resistance pathways. Methods: C6 glioma and HN5 human squamous carcinoma cells were stably transfected with a dual HIF-1 signaling reporter construct (dxHRE-tk/eGFP-cmvRed2XPRT). Reporter cells were serially interrogated in vitro before and after irradiation as monolayer and multicellular spheroid cultures and as subcutaneous xenografts in nu/nu mice. Results: In vitro , single-dose irradiation of C6 and HN5 reporter cells modestly impacted HIF-1 signaling in normoxic monolayers and inhibited HIF-1 signaling in maturing spheroids. In contrast, irradiation of C6 or HN5 reporter xenografts with 8 Gy in vivo elicited marked upregulation of HIF-1 signaling and downstream proangiogenic signaling at 48 hours which preceded recovery of tumor growth. In situ ultrasound imaging and dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI indicated that HIF-1 signaling followed acute disruption of stromal vascular function. High-resolution positron emission tomography and dual-contrast DCE-MRI of immobilized dorsal skin window tumors confirmed postradiotherapy HIF-1 signaling to spatiotemporally coincide with impaired stromal vascular function. Targeted disruption of HIF-1 signaling established this pathway to be a determinant of tumor radioresistance. Conclusions: Our results illustrate that tumor radioresistance is mediated by a capacity to compensate for stromal vascular disruption through HIF-1–dependent proangiogenic signaling and that clinically relevant vascular imaging techniques can spatially define mechanisms associated with tumor irradiation. Mol Cancer Res; 9(3); 259–70. ©2011 AACR .

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transient elevation of glycolysis confers radio-resistance by facilitating DNA repair in cells

TL;DR: These findings suggest that enhanced glycolysis generally observed in cancer cells may be responsible for the radio-resistance, partly by enhancing the repair of DNA damage.
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Prediction of response to radiotherapy in the treatment of esophageal cancer using stem cell markers.

TL;DR: It is shown that the CD44+/CD24- subpopulation of EC cells exerts a higher proliferation rate and sphere forming potential and is more radioresistant in vitro, when compared to unselected or CD 44+/ CD24+ cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

MR-based hypoxia measures in human glioma.

TL;DR: The presented method of rOEF imaging is a promising tool for the metabolic characterization of human glioma and further validation involving a bigger cohort and extended immuno-histochemical correlation is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

EBV-LMP1 targeted DNAzyme enhances radiosensitivity by inhibiting tumor angiogenesis via the JNKs/HIF-1 pathway in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

TL;DR: It is suggested that VEGF expression is increased by LMP1 through the JNKs/c-Jun signaling pathway and indicated that DZ1 enhances the radiosensitivity of NPC cells by inhibiting HIF-1/VEGF activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nicotinic modulation of therapeutic response in vitro and in vivo

TL;DR: Findings imply that during tobacco use, nicotine may function as a systemic agent through acute and reversible regulation of HIF‐1α expression and a decreased therapeutic response.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Targeting HIF-1 for cancer therapy

TL;DR: Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) activates the transcription of genes that are involved in crucial aspects of cancer biology, including angiogenesis, cell survival, glucose metabolism and invasion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multimodality image registration by maximization of mutual information

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that subvoxel accuracy with respect to the stereotactic reference solution can be achieved completely automatically and without any prior segmentation, feature extraction, or other preprocessing steps which makes this method very well suited for clinical applications.
Book

Radiobiology for the radiologist

TL;DR: Radiobiology for the radiologist, Radiobiology in general, Radiology for radiologists as mentioned in this paper, Radiology in the field of radiology, radiology for radiology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Angiogenesis in life, disease and medicine

TL;DR: Angiogenesis research will probably change the face of medicine in the next decades, with more than 500 million people worldwide predicted to benefit from pro- or anti-angiogenesis treatments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of angiogenesis by hypoxia: role of the HIF system.

TL;DR: The role of HIF in developmental, adaptive and neoplastic angiogenesis, and the implications of oncogenic activation of extensive, physiologically interconnected hypoxia pathways for the tumor phenotype are discussed.
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