Postovit Lynne-Marie, Abbott Daniel E, Payne Stacey L, Wheaton William W, Margaryan Naira V, Sullivan Richard, Jansen Matthias K, Csiszar Katalin, Hendrix Mary J C, Kirschmann Dawn A
Children's Memorial Research Center, Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois 60614, USA.
J Cell Biochem. 2008 Apr 1;103(5):1369-78. doi: 10.1002/jcb.21517.
Fluctuating oxygen levels characterize the microenvironment of many cancers and tumor hypoxia is associated with increased invasion and metastatic potential concomitant with a poor prognosis. Similarly, the expression of lysyl oxidase (LOX) in breast cancer facilitates tumor cell migration and is associated with estrogen receptor negative status and reduced patient survival. Here we demonstrate that hypoxia/reoxygenation drives poorly invasive breast cancer cells toward a more aggressive phenotype by up-regulating LOX expression and catalytic activity. Specifically, hypoxia markedly increased LOX protein expression; however, catalytic activity (beta-aminopropionitrile inhibitable hydrogen peroxide production) was significantly reduced under hypoxic conditions. Moreover, poorly invasive breast cancer cells displayed a marked increase in LOX-dependent FAK/Src activation and cell migration following hypoxia/reoxygenation, but not in response to hypoxia alone. Furthermore, LOX expression is only partially dependent on hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1alpha) in poorly invasive breast cancer cells, as hypoxia mimetics and overexpression of HIF-1alpha could not up-regulate LOX expression to the levels observed under hypoxia. Clinically, LOX expression positively correlates with tumor progression and co-localization with hypoxic regions (defined by HIF-1alpha expression) in ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive ductal carcinoma primary tumors. However, positive correlation is lost in metastatic tumors, suggesting that LOX expression is independent of a hypoxic environment at later stages of tumor progression. This work demonstrates that both hypoxia and reoxygenation are necessary for LOX catalytic activity which facilitates breast cancer cell migration through a hydrogen peroxide-mediated mechanism; thereby illuminating a potentially novel mechanism by which poorly invasive cancer cells can obtain metastatic competency.
氧水平波动是许多癌症微环境的特征,肿瘤缺氧与侵袭性增加和转移潜能增强相关,同时预后不良。同样,乳腺癌中赖氨酰氧化酶(LOX)的表达促进肿瘤细胞迁移,并与雌激素受体阴性状态及患者生存率降低相关。在此,我们证明缺氧/复氧通过上调LOX表达和催化活性,促使侵袭性较弱的乳腺癌细胞转变为更具侵袭性的表型。具体而言,缺氧显著增加了LOX蛋白表达;然而,在缺氧条件下,催化活性(β-氨基丙腈可抑制的过氧化氢生成)显著降低。此外,侵袭性较弱的乳腺癌细胞在缺氧/复氧后,而非仅在缺氧时,显示出LOX依赖的FAK/Src激活和细胞迁移显著增加。此外,在侵袭性较弱的乳腺癌细胞中,LOX表达仅部分依赖于缺氧诱导因子-1(HIF-1α),因为缺氧模拟物和HIF-1α的过表达均无法将LOX表达上调至缺氧条件下观察到的水平。临床上,LOX表达与原位导管癌和浸润性导管癌原发肿瘤的肿瘤进展呈正相关,并与缺氧区域(由HIF-1α表达定义)共定位。然而,在转移性肿瘤中这种正相关消失,表明在肿瘤进展后期,LOX表达独立于缺氧环境。这项研究表明,缺氧和复氧对于LOX催化活性都是必需的,该活性通过过氧化氢介导的机制促进乳腺癌细胞迁移;从而揭示了一种潜在的新机制,侵袭性较弱的癌细胞可借此获得转移能力。