posted on 2023-04-03, 17:22authored byAlessandro Valli, Matteo Morotti, Christos E. Zois, Patrick K. Albers, Tomoyoshi Soga, Katharina Feldinger, Roman Fischer, Martin Frejno, Alan McIntyre, Esther Bridges, Syed Haider, Francesca M. Buffa, Dilair Baban, Miguel Rodriguez, Oscar Yanes, Hannah J. Whittington, Hannah A. Lake, Sevasti Zervou, Craig A. Lygate, Benedikt M. Kessler, Adrian L. Harris
S1. Blocking O-GlcNAcylation in vivo by inducing shOGT or alloxan treatment qualitatively reduces EZH2 immunoreactivity after irradiation.
Funding
Cancer Research UK
Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR) Oxford
British Heart Foundation
History
ARTICLE ABSTRACT
Hypoxia-inducible factor 1α is a key regulator of the hypoxia response in normal and cancer tissues. It is well recognized to regulate glycolysis and is a target for therapy. However, how tumor cells adapt to grow in the absence of HIF1α is poorly understood and an important concept to understand for developing targeted therapies is the flexibility of the metabolic response to hypoxia via alternative pathways. We analyzed pathways that allow cells to survive hypoxic stress in the absence of HIF1α, using the HCT116 colon cancer cell line with deleted HIF1α versus control. Spheroids were used to provide a 3D model of metabolic gradients. We conducted a metabolomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic analysis and integrated the results. These showed surprisingly that in three-dimensional growth, a key regulatory step of glycolysis is Aldolase A rather than phosphofructokinase. Furthermore, glucose uptake could be maintained in hypoxia through upregulation of GLUT14, not previously recognized in this role. Finally, there was a marked adaptation and change of phosphocreatine energy pathways, which made the cells susceptible to inhibition of creatine metabolism in hypoxic conditions. Overall, our studies show a complex adaptation to hypoxia that can bypass HIF1α, but it is targetable and it provides new insight into the key metabolic pathways involved in cancer growth.
Under hypoxia and HIF1 blockade, cancer cells adapt their energy metabolism via upregulation of the GLUT14 glucose transporter and creatine metabolism providing new avenues for drug targeting.