Hypoxia influences nearly all steps in the metastatic cascade, and is an independent adverse indicator for cancer prognosis. Cellular response to hypoxia is tightly regulated, and is mediated by hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), with HIF-1 being the ubiquitously expressed homologue. Canonical response to hypoxia involves stabilization of HIF-1?, which acts as a key transcriptional factor, regulating the expression of more than 1000 gene products indirectly, influencing key steps in cancer progression. However, we discovered that the population response to hypoxia is more complex than the canonically understood response, with a small subpopulation displaying oscillations in HIF-1? stabilization and transcriptional activity in a lactate dependent manner. Lactate is a byproduct of glycolysis, which is itself increased due to HIF-1? activity, and can cause degradation of HIF-1? by chaperone mediated autophagy, driving oscillations. Owing to the centrality of HIF- 1? in transcriptional regulation in hypoxic tumors, oscillations in HIF-1? in a subset of cells could have profound consequences in gene expression, and cancer progression. Our preliminary data show that oscillatory hypoxic input can drive large scale transcriptomic changes, resulting in increased metabolic activity, cell proliferation, as well as altered regulation of pathways related to circadian rhythms, and invasion. These data suggest that possibly emergent oscillations in HIF-1? activity may provide a selective advantage to these cells to escape hypoxia induced stress response. Our preliminary data present a strong rationale to investigate this emergent phenotype in cancer populations, the mechanisms driving these oscillations and the phenotypic consequence of these oscillations. Furthermore, many of the genes responded to oscillating hypoxia as a qualitatively different signal, suggesting presence of regulatory motifs, incoherent feedforward loops (IFFLs) which could distinguish between oscillatory and sustained HIF-1? signal. Using an integrated approach involving computational modeling, bioinformatics, and experimentation, we will systematically identify and validate these IFFLs, as well as the co-factors necessary to form these IFFLs along with HIF-1?.
Our aim will not only shed light on the fundamental regulatory mechanisms of decoding of oscillatory signaling in cancer, but also provide a targeting strategy to contain the phenotypic consequences of emergent HIF-1? oscillations. Finally, we will test the consequence of emergent HIF-1? oscillations in vivo in a mouse model of breast cancer tumorigenesis, and test if oscillating HIF-1? confers increased tumorigenicity, proliferation, and survival. Our proposed method will facilitate mechanistically understanding the genesis of oscillations, generation of phenotypic heterogeneity in cancer, as well as understand and target the consequence of this emergent subpopulation in influencing cancer progression. !

Public Health Relevance

We have unearthed emergence of a new subpopulation in cancer cells, which can survive and grow in hypoxic stress by oscillating its oxygen sensing molecular machinery. We propose to understand emergence of these oscillations, their consequence to cancer progression, and develop methods to contain those outcomes.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37)
Project #
1R37CA248161-01
Application #
9943402
Study Section
Tumor Cell Biology Study Section (TCB)
Program Officer
Mercer, Natalia
Project Start
2020-05-01
Project End
2025-04-30
Budget Start
2020-05-01
Budget End
2021-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Connecticut
Department
Biomedical Engineering
Type
Schools of Dentistry/Oral Hygn
DUNS #
022254226
City
Farmington
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06030