Abstract
Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) are essential mediators of the cellular oxygen-signaling pathway. They are heterodimeric transcription factors consisting of an oxygen-sensitive alpha subunit (HIF-α) and a constitutive beta subunit (HIF-β) that facilitate both oxygen delivery and adaptation to oxygen deprivation by regulating the expression of genes that control glucose uptake, metabolism, angiogenesis, erythropoiesis, cell proliferation, and apoptosis. In most experimental models, the HIF pathway is a positive regulator of tumor growth as its inhibition often results in tumor suppression. In clinical samples, HIF is found elevated and correlates with poor patient prognosis in a variety of cancers. In summary, HIF regulates multiple aspects of tumorigenesis, including angiogenesis, proliferation, metabolism, metastasis, differentiation, and response to radiation therapy, making it a critical regulator of the malignant phenotype.
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Main
Tumor hypoxia was first described in the 1950s by radiation oncologists as a frequent cause of failure to radiotherapy in solid tumors. Today, it is evident that tumor hypoxia and the critical molecular mediators of hypoxia, hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), regulate multiple steps of tumorigenesis including tumor formation, progression, and response to therapy. This review will focus on our current understanding of HIFs and their role in tumorigenesis.
HIFs
HIFs facilitate both oxygen delivery and adaptation to oxygen deprivation by regulating the expression of genes that are involved in many cellular processes, including glucose uptake and metabolism, angiogenesis, erythropoiesis, cell proliferation, and apoptosis.1 They are members of the PAS (PER-ARNT (arylhydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator)-SIM) family of basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors that bind to DNA as heterodimers composed of an oxygen-sensitive α subunit and a constitutively expressed β subunit, also known as ARNT. To date, three HIFs (HIF-1, -2, and -3) have been identified that regulate transcriptional programs in response to low oxygen levels.
HIF-1 was the first HIF family member to be characterized. Using DNA affinity purification, HIF-1 was identified as a hypoxic-induced factor that bound an 18-nt fragment of the EPO enhancer required for the hypoxic activation of EPO in Hep3B cells.2 Structural analysis of the HIF-1α protein revealed that HIF-1α contains four distinct domains including a bHLH domain for DNA binding and dimerization, a PAS domain for dimerization and target gene specificity, an oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) required for degradation by the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway,3 and two transactivation domains located in the C-terminal portion of the protein (Figure 1).4 Notably, HIF-1 has emerged as a critical regulator of the cellular response to hypoxia since it is ubiquitously expressed and induces the expression of many hypoxia-inducible genes.5
HIF-2 was the second HIF family member to be identified and shares approximately 48% amino-acid sequence homology with HIF-1.6, 7, 8 HIF-2α is structurally similar to HIF-1α and contains bHLH, PAS, and ODD motifs with 85, 70 and 70% amino-acid sequence homology to HIF-1α (Figure 1).6, 9 Like HIF-1α, HIF-2α heterodimerizes with ARNT and can induce gene expression.10 In contrast to HIF-1α, HIF-2α expression is restricted to specific cell types that include endothelial cells, glial cells, type II pneumocytes, cardiomyocytes, fibroblasts of the kidney, interstitial cells of the pancreas and duodenum, and hepatocytes.11
The third HIF family member, HIF-3α, encodes a bHLH-PAS domain with 57 and 53% amino-acid sequence identity to HIF-1α and HIF-2α, respectively, and an ODD domain 61% similar in sequence to the HIF-1α ODD domain (Figure 1).12 Similar to HIF-1α and HIF-2α, HIF-3α can dimerize with ARNT and bind to hypoxia response elements (HREs) in vitro. The role of HIF-3 in the hypoxic regulation of target gene expression in vivo is not well understood.12 HIF-3α has multiple splice variants, of which the inhibitory domain PAS protein (IPAS) is the best characterized. IPAS is a truncated form of HIF-3α that lacks a transactivation domain and functions as a dominant negative by binding to HIF-1α and preventing the formation of HIF-1α/ARNT heterocomplexes.13 HIF-3α mRNA can be detected in a variety of tissues, including the thymus, lung, brain, heart, kidney, liver, eye, and brain.12, 13
ARNT is the general binding partner for all bHLH/PAS family members. It was first identified as the protein required for dioxin (aryl hydrocarbon) receptor function in hepatocytes.14, 15 In addition to binding to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor, ARNT can also heterodimerize with the single-minded proteins (SIM1 and SIM2) and the alpha subunits of HIF-1, -2, and -3. Similar to the HIF-α subunits, ARNT contains bHLH, PAS, and transactivation domains (Figure 1).14, 16 However, ARNT lacks an ODD domain, and is therefore constitutively expressed in all tissues under aerobic conditions.17
In addition to ARNT, another HIF-β subunit, ARNT2, can heterodimerize with HIF-α proteins. Overall, ARNT2, has 57% amino-acid sequence identity to ARNT.18 The N-terminal of the protein containing bHLH and PAS domains shares 81% similarity with ARNT, suggesting that the two proteins may share similar functions; however, the expression patterns of ARNT and ARNT2 differ (Figure 1). Whereas Arnt mRNA is ubiquitously expressed, Arnt2 expression is restricted to the brain and kidney in adult tissues.18 Consistent with Arnt2 expression in the brain, ARNT2 plays a role in mediating hypoxic gene expression in neurons.19
Oxygen-Dependent Regulation of HIF
Under normoxia, HIFs are targeted for proteasomal degradation by the von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor, pVHL. It has been shown that pVHL is the substrate recognition component of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that interacts with HIF-α in an oxygen-dependent manner. Hydroxylation of conserved proline residues within the HIF-α ODD by prolyl-4-hydroxylase domain (PHD)-containing proteins mediates pVHL binding and degradation.20, 21 Under hypoxia, HIF-α subunits are stabilized and translocate to the nucleus, where they heterodimerize with ARNT and bind to HREs located within regulatory elements of HIF target genes. Cell culture studies have shown that HIF stabilization and DNA-binding activity is induced at oxygen concentrations below 6% oxygen and is maximal at 0.5% oxygen tensions.22 Once stabilized, the HIF-α/ARNT heterodimer activates transcription by recruiting the transcriptional activators p300 and CBP. The interaction between HIF and p300/CBP is also regulated in an oxygen-dependent manner by factor inhibiting HIF-1 (FIH-1), a member of the 2-oxoglutarate and Fe(II)-dependent oxygenase superfamily. FIH hydroxylates asparagine residues located within the HIF-α C-terminal transactivation domain (CTAD) and prevents p300/CBP binding.23 Thus, full activation of HIF transcriptional activity requires both HIFα stabilization and CTAD activation (Figure 2).24
Recent studies indicate that mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) also plays an important role in regulating HIF protein levels under hypoxia. Multiple groups have observed that genetic and chemical inhibition of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and ROS production results in decreased HIF stability under hypoxic conditions.25, 26, 27, 28 The mechanisms by which ROS regulate hypoxic HIF stabilization remain to be defined.
HIF Activation in Cancer
A recent survey of malignant and normal tissues found that the expression of both HIF-1α and HIF-2α are commonly increased in a variety of human tumors, including bladder, breast, colon, glial, hepatocellular, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, and renal tumors.29 In clinical specimens, elevated HIF-1 expression correlates with poor patient outcome in head and neck cancer, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, colorectal, pancreatic, breast, cervical, osteosarcoma, endometrial, ovarian, bladder, glioblastoma, and gastric carcinomas,30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41 while elevated HIF-2 expression correlates with poor patient outcome in hepatocellular, colorectal carcinoma, melanoma, ovarian, and non-small cell lung cancers (Table 1).34, 39, 42, 43 Collectively, these findings highlight that HIF activation is a common event in cancer and suggest that HIF may play a role in tumorigenesis.
Hypoxia is the best-characterized mechanism of HIF activation in tumors. It has been estimated that 50–60% of solid tumors contain areas of hypoxic and/or anoxic tissues that develop as a result of an imbalance between oxygen supply and consumption in proliferating tumors.45 Low oxygen concentrations may result from increased metabolic activity and oxygen consumption and/or increased tumor cell distance from local capillaries and blood supply. Consistent with tumor hypoxia as a mechanism of HIF activation, HIF protein is commonly detected in perinecrotic regions of sporadic tumors and overlaps with staining for known hypoxic markers.29, 46
HIF can also be activated in tumors under normoxic conditions through genetic alterations in its oxygen-signaling pathway. As described earlier, VHL plays a central role in regulating HIF transcriptional activity (Figure 2). Inactivation of VHL results in HIF stabilization and increased target expression irrespective of oxygen concentrations.47, 48 VHL-mediated regulation of HIF transcriptional activity has important implications for tumor development. Germ-line mutations in VHL results in VHL disease, a familial tumor syndrome that predisposes patients to the development of highly vascularized neoplasms, including hemangioblastomas of the retina and central nervous system, renal cell carcinomas (RCCs), endocrine and exocrine pancreatic tumors, as well as pheochromocytomas.49 VHL is also inactivated in the majority of sporadic RCC and hemangioblastomas, highlighting the importance of VHL tumor suppressor activity.50, 51
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that activation of the PI-3 kinase signaling pathway can also induce HIF activity. Mazure et al.52 first observed that inactivation of PI-3 kinase significantly inhibited the hypoxic induction of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in Ha-ras-transformed cells. Subsequently, it was found that activation of the PI-3 kinase/Akt pathway through enhanced growth factor signaling or inactivation of negative regulators including PTEN or TSC2 also increased HIF activity (Figure 2).53, 54, 55, 56 In many cell types, PI-3 kinase/Akt signaling regulates HIF activity in an mTOR-dependent manner. Although the exact mechanism by which mTOR regulates HIF activity is unclear, evidence suggests that it may have both transcriptional and post-translational effects on HIF.57, 58
HIF Functions in Cancer
Tumorigenesis involves a number of alterations in cell physiology that contribute to malignant growth.59 Importantly, HIFs have been found to promote key steps in tumorigenesis, including angiogenesis, metabolism, proliferation, metastasis, and differentiation.
Angiogenesis
Neovascularization is critical for tumor progression since the supply of oxygen and nutrients becomes limited in tumor cells that are located more than 100 μm away from a blood vessel.60 The ability of tumor cells to induce angiogenesis occurs through a multistep process, termed the ‘angiogenic switch,’ which ultimately tips the balance toward pro-angiogenic factors.59 HIF can directly activate the expression of a number of pro-angiogenic factors, including VEGF, VEGF receptors FLT-1 and FLK-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), angiopoietins (ANG-1 and -2), platelet-derived growth factor B (PDGF-B), the TIE-2 receptor, and matrix metalloproteinases MMP-2 and -9 (Figure 3, for a recent review).61 Of all the proangiogenic factors induced by HIF, VEGF-A is particularly noteworthy since it has potent angiogenic properties and is expressed in a large number of human tumors.62
In both human cell lines and murine model systems, HIF signaling has been shown to be required for the regulation of VEGF and tumor angiogenesis. However, the relative contribution of individual HIF family members in this process is controversial. A proangiogenic role has been reported for HIF-1. Notably, HIF-1-deficient ES cells formed significantly smaller teratocarcinomas that exhibited reduced tumor vessel density and VEGF levels compared to teratocarcinomas derived from wild-type ES cells.63, 64 VEGF expression and angiogenesis were also found to be HIF-1 dependent in hypoxic astrocytes providing further evidence for HIF-1-mediated angiogenesis.44, 65 Recent studies suggest that HIF-2 can also regulate angiogenesis. Raval et al.66 observed that VEGF expression was preferentially induced by HIF-2 in VHL-deficient RCC cells that expressed both HIF-1 and -2. To directly compare the relative contributions of HIF-1 and -2 in tumorigenesis, Covello et al.67 generated teratocarcinomas derived from ES cells in which HIF-2α was knocked into the HIF-1α locus, thereby expanding HIF-2 expression. Teratomas derived from HIF-2α knock-in ES cells were larger and exhibited increased vascularity and VEGF expression compared to wild-type (HIF-1α expressing)-derived teratomas, suggesting that HIF-2 plays an important role in promoting tumor angiogenesis and growth. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that both HIF-1 and -2 can activate VEGF and tumor angiogenesis; however, their individual contributions appear to be cell-type dependent. These differences may be attributed to different levels of HIF-1 and -2 in individual cell types and may be affected by cell-specific cofactors that modulate HIF activity.
Metabolism
It was noted over 70 years ago that cancer cells shift glucose metabolism from oxidative to glycolytic pathways. This process known as the Warburg effect, involves decreased mitochondrial respiration and increased lactate production even in the presence of oxygen.68 It is well established that HIF, in particular HIF-1, directly regulates the expression of a number of genes involved in glycolytic metabolism, including glucose transporters, glycolytic enzymes, lactate production, and pyruvate metabolism in both hypoxic and normoxic (e.g. VHL deficient) cells (Figure 3).10, 69 Recent studies using transformed cell lines show that HIF-1 can also regulate cellular metabolism by controlling mitochondrial respiration. Zhang et al.70 observed that HIF-1 negatively regulates mitochondrial mass and oxygen consumption in VHL-deficient RCC cells. The mechanism by which HIF mediates these effects appears to be through inhibition of C-Myc activity. HIF-1 was found to negatively regulate C-Myc activity and mitochondrial respiration through transcriptional activation of the C-Myc repressor, MXI-1, and through regulation of C-Myc protein stability. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that HIF controls multiple aspects of metabolism through direct transcriptional activation of genes involved in glucose metabolism and indirectly by regulating C-Myc activity. These observations indicate that HIF is an important mediator of metabolism in cancer.
Proliferation
HIF-2 plays an important role in promoting tumor growth. In VHL-deficient RCC cells, HIF-2 is both necessary and sufficient to maintain tumor growth.71, 72 Furthermore, tumors generated from RCC cell lines overexpressing HIF-2 grow at a faster rate compared to HIF-1-overexpressing tumors.66 Covello et al.67 demonstrated that teratomas derived from ES cells with HIF-2α in the place of the HIF-1α locus are larger and exhibit increased proliferation rates compared to wild-type (HIF-1α expressing) teratomas. While HIF-2 may facilitate tumor growth through multiple mechanisms, recent studies indicate that HIF-2 can positively regulate cell proliferation.
One mechanism by which HIF-2 controls cellular proliferation is through modulation of C-Myc activity. C-Myc promotes cellular proliferation by regulating the expression of genes involved in cell cycle control including cyclins (cyclin D2) and cyclin kinase inhibitors (p21 and p27).73 Unlike HIF-1, HIF-2 promotes C-Myc-dependent activation of cyclin D2 and repression of p27 in RCC cells.74 How HIF-2 preferentially promotes C-Myc activity remains unclear, but may occur through alterations in C-Myc interactions with transcriptional cofactors, including Sp1, Miz1, and Max.74
HIF-2 may also drive cell cycle progression through the activation of cyclin D1.66 Cyclin D1 is a well-characterized cell cycle regulatory protein that is upregulated in many cancers. Recent studies have shown a correlation between HIF-2-mediated cyclin D1 expression and tumor growth in RCC cells.66, 75 Whether cyclin D1 is a direct HIF target remains to be determined.
Metastasis
Metastasis is a critical step in tumor pathogenesis and is the primary cause of human cancer deaths. It occurs in a series of distinct steps that include tumor cell invasion, intravasation, extravasation, and proliferation. HIF activation correlates with metastasis in multiple tumors and can promote metastasis through the regulation of key factors governing tumor cell metastatic potential, including E-cadherin, lysyl oxidase (LOX), CXCR4, and stromal-derived factor 1 (SDF-1) (Figure 3).
E-cadherin is a key factor governing metastatic potential in the majority of epithelial cancers. It is a cellular adhesion molecule that regulates cell–cell adhesion and stimulates antigrowth signals through cytoplasmic interactions with β catenin (for review).59 The importance of E-cadherin in regulating metastasis is underscored by the findings that E-cadherin inactivation enhances metastatic potential and forced expression of E-cadherin in cancer cells inhibits metastasis.59 HIF has recently been described as a critical factor for the regulation of E-cadherin expression in ovarian carcinoma and VHL-deficient renal cells.76, 77 It has been proposed that HIF mediates repression of E-cadherin expression through the upregulation of E-cadherin-specific repressors, including Snail and SIP1.78
HIF also promotes metastasis through activation of the extracellular matrix protein LOX.79 LOX is an amine oxidase involved in extracellular matrix formation. Increased LOX expression is correlated with decreased distant metastasis-free survival and overall survival in patients with breast and head and neck cancer. In addition, LOX activation promotes the invasive and metastatic potential of breast cancer cells. Erler et al.79 recently reported that LOX is a direct HIF target in hypoxic tumor cells and that genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of LOX is sufficient to prevent hypoxia-induced cell invasion and metastasis in vitro and in vivo. These findings indicate that LOX is a critical factor in hypoxia-induced metastasis.
Interactions between the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and its ligand SDF-1 play an important role in the directional migration of metastatic tumor cells. CXCR4 is the most common chemokine expressed in tumors and SDF-1 is highly expressed at sites of metastasis, including the lung, bone marrow, and liver.80 Studies have shown that HIF is a potent inducer of both CXCR4 and SDF-1 expression in a variety of cell types, including VHL-deficient RCCs, non-small cell lung cancer, glioblastomas, and endothelial cells.80, 81, 82, 83, 84
Differentiation
Accumulating evidence suggests that cancer stem cells are important mediators of tumor growth. According to the ‘cancer stem cell’ hypothesis, tumors are thought to originate from a small population of proliferating cells that maintain the ability to self-renew and differentiate into a heterogeneous population.85 It is well documented that hypoxia and HIF promotes an undifferentiated state in a variety of cell types. Hypoxia has been shown to prevent the differentiation of progenitor cells and promote dedifferentiation of cancer cells.86, 87, 88, 89 Gustafsson et al.86 has provided evidence to suggest that Notch plays an important role in maintaining a dedifferentiated state under hypoxia in multiple cell types, including cortical neural stem cells, myogenic satellite cells, and C2C12 cells. In these cells, hypoxia enhanced Notch signaling in a HIF-dependent manner, whereby HIF-1α interacts with and stabilizes the Notch ICD domain. In addition to regulating Notch, HIF could also promote an undifferentiated state by directly activating the expression of genes involved in stem cell maintenance. Evidence suggests that primitive hematopoietic and embryonic stem (ES) cells reside in an hypoxic microenvironment, suggesting that low oxygen tensions may play a role in maintaining stem cell fate.90, 91 In support of this notion, hypoxia has been shown to maintain human ES (hES) cells in an undifferentiated state and maintain stem cell pluripotency.92 Interestingly, maintenance of a dedifferentiated state in hypoxic hES cells correlated with the expression of Oct4, transcription factor involved in maintaining an undifferentiated state in ES that has recently been identified as one of four factors sufficient to reprogram fibroblasts to a cell that exhibits ES cell morphology and growth properties.93 Covello et al.94 recently demonstrated that HIF-2 directly regulates Oct4 expression in 293 and hypoxic human RCC cells. Whether Oct4 and Notch are required to maintain an undifferentiated state in hypoxic tumor cells remains to be determined.
HIF and Tumor Inhibition
Despite HIF's protumorigenic properties, HIF has also been reported to inhibit tumor growth. Carmeliet et al.64 observed that tumors derived from HIF-1-deficient ES cells formed larger tumors compared to wild-type tumors. In addition, HIF activation has been reported to inhibit tumor growth in additional cell types, including glioblastomas and VHL-deficient fibrosarcomas.95, 96 While all of these tumor models confirmed a positive role for HIF in tumor angiogenesis, tumor growth inhibition was associated with decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis.
Recent studies have elucidated mechanisms by which HIF-1 can negatively regulate tumor growth. First, HIF-1 can indirectly induce cell cycle arrest by inhibiting Myc activity. It has been proposed that a physical interaction between HIF-1α and Myc prevents Myc-mediated repression of the cyclin kinase inhibitor p21.97 Second, HIF can induce apoptosis through both direct and indirect mechanisms. It has been reported that HIF-1 can directly induce the expression of the proapoptotic genes BNIP3 and NIX in a variety of human cancer cell lines, macrophages, and endothelial cells.98, 99 The mechanisms of BNIP3-mediated cell death under hypoxia are not well understood. A recent report suggests that BNIP3 is required for hypoxia-induced macroautophagy.100 Autophagy is generally thought of as a cellular survival mechanism that involves recycling of amino acids and fatty acids to produce energy under conditions of nutrient deprivation and stress; however, sustained autophagy can result in autophagic cell death. Whether macroautophagy is induced by HIF as a mechanism for cellular survival and or cell death remains to be determined. HIF can also indirectly induce apoptosis by promoting glucose deprivation. Biju et al.101 observed that in the presence of low glucose, HIF-1 promotes hypoxia-induced cell death in renal epithelial cells as a result of rapid glucose depletion. This finding suggests that HIF-1-mediated glycolysis may be a mechanism of hypoxia-induced apoptosis in cell types where glucose stores are limited.
HIF and Radiotherapy
Radiotherapy is a highly effective treatment for cancer. The targets of radiotherapy are both tumor cells and tumor vasculature. Previous studies have indicated that radiation results in a reoxygenation-dependent increase in HIF-1 activity by two distinct mechanisms. It has been proposed that tumor reoxygenation results in both HIF-1 stabilization and enhanced translation of HIF targets through the release of ROS and stress granule depolymerization, respectively.102 The effects of HIF on tumor radiosensitivity are twofold. On one hand, HIF-1 stabilization promotes tumor vasculature radioresistance through the release of proangiogenic cytokines such as VEGF.102 In contrast, HIF-1 can also induce tumor radiosensitivity through the induction of apoptosis.103 Overall, it appears that HIF-1 stabilization promotes radioresistance since HIF-1-deficient tumors are more sensitive to radiation compared to wild-type tumors.103 These findings suggest that combined radiation and antiangiogenic therapy may be an effective strategy for activating HIF-mediated radiosensitivity. In support of this notion, Magnon et al.104 observed that a combination of radioiodide and antiangiogenic therapies significantly inhibited tumor growth in xenograft and spontaneous tumor model systems. Notably, tumor growth inhibition was associated with HIF-1-dependent tumor cell apoptosis. These findings support the use of angiogenic inhibitors to overcome HIF-1-dependent radioresistance in tumor therapy.
Conclusion
In conclusion, HIFs are transcription factors that mediate cellular adaptations to oxygen deprivation. Over 100 direct HIF target genes have been identified that regulate a number of cellular processes, including glucose metabolism, angiogenesis, erythropoiesis, proliferation, and invasion. HIF can also indirectly regulate cellular processes such as proliferation and differentiation through interactions with other signaling proteins such as C-Myc and Notch. There are multiple mechanisms by which HIF can become activated and promote tumor progression. In this review, we have summarized recent findings that implicate HIF in the regulation of key steps in tumorigenesis.
Abbreviations
- ARNT:
-
arylhydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator
- bHLH:
-
basic helix-loop-helix
- HIFs:
-
hypoxia-inducible factors
- IPAS:
-
inhibitory domain PAS protein
- ODD:
-
oxygen-dependent degradation domain
- PAS:
-
PER-ARNT-SIM family
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We thank Dr. Andrew Rankin for critical reading of the manuscript and apologize to those colleagues whose work was not cited due to space limitations.
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Rankin, E., Giaccia, A. The role of hypoxia-inducible factors in tumorigenesis. Cell Death Differ 15, 678–685 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2008.21
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2008.21
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