The “angiogenic switch” during tumor progression is increasingly recognized as a milestone event in tumorigenesis, although the surprising prometastatic effect of antiangiogenic therapies has recently shaken the scientific community. Tumor hypoxia has been singled out as a possible responsible factor in this prometastatic effect, although the molecular pathways are completely unknown. We report herein that human melanoma cells respond to hypoxia through a deregulation of the mitochondrial release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by the electron transfer chain complex III. These ROS are mandatory to stabilize hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), the master transcriptional regulator of the hypoxic response. We found that melanoma cells sense hypoxia-enhancing expression/activation of the Met proto-oncogene, which drives a motogenic escape program. Silencing analyses revealed a definite hierarchy of this process, in which mitochondrial ROS drive HIF-1α stabilization, which in turn activates the Met proto-oncogene. This pathway elicits a clear metastatic program of melanoma cells, enhancing spreading on extracellular matrix, motility, and invasion of 3D matrices, as well as growth of metastatic colonies and the ability to form capillary-like structures by vasculogenic mimicry. Both pharmacological and genetic interference with mitochondrial ROS delivery or Met expression block the hypoxia-driven metastatic program. Hence, we propose that hypoxia-driven ROS act as a primary driving force to elicit an invasive program exploited by aggressive melanoma cells to escape from a hypoxic hostile environment.
HIF-1α stabilization by mitochondrial ROS promotes Met-dependent invasive growth and vasculogenic mimicry in melanoma cells / G. Comito; M. Calvani; E. Giannoni; F. Bianchini; L. Calorini; E. Torre; C. Migliore; S. Giordano; P. Chiarugi. - In: FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY & MEDICINE. - ISSN 0891-5849. - ELETTRONICO. - 51(4):(2011), pp. 893-904. [10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2011.05.042]
HIF-1α stabilization by mitochondrial ROS promotes Met-dependent invasive growth and vasculogenic mimicry in melanoma cells.
COMITO, GIUSEPPINAInvestigation
;CALVANI, MAURAInvestigation
;GIANNONI, ELISASupervision
;BIANCHINI, FRANCESCAInvestigation
;CALORINI, LIDOConceptualization
;TORRE, EUGENIOInvestigation
;CHIARUGI, PAOLA
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2011
Abstract
The “angiogenic switch” during tumor progression is increasingly recognized as a milestone event in tumorigenesis, although the surprising prometastatic effect of antiangiogenic therapies has recently shaken the scientific community. Tumor hypoxia has been singled out as a possible responsible factor in this prometastatic effect, although the molecular pathways are completely unknown. We report herein that human melanoma cells respond to hypoxia through a deregulation of the mitochondrial release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by the electron transfer chain complex III. These ROS are mandatory to stabilize hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), the master transcriptional regulator of the hypoxic response. We found that melanoma cells sense hypoxia-enhancing expression/activation of the Met proto-oncogene, which drives a motogenic escape program. Silencing analyses revealed a definite hierarchy of this process, in which mitochondrial ROS drive HIF-1α stabilization, which in turn activates the Met proto-oncogene. This pathway elicits a clear metastatic program of melanoma cells, enhancing spreading on extracellular matrix, motility, and invasion of 3D matrices, as well as growth of metastatic colonies and the ability to form capillary-like structures by vasculogenic mimicry. Both pharmacological and genetic interference with mitochondrial ROS delivery or Met expression block the hypoxia-driven metastatic program. Hence, we propose that hypoxia-driven ROS act as a primary driving force to elicit an invasive program exploited by aggressive melanoma cells to escape from a hypoxic hostile environment.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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