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Radiation and inhibition of angiogenesis by canstatin synergize to induce HIF-1α–mediated tumor apoptotic switch
Claire Magnon, … , Michel Perricaudet, Martin Schlumberger
Claire Magnon, … , Michel Perricaudet, Martin Schlumberger
Published July 2, 2007
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2007;117(7):1844-1855. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI30269.
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Research Article Oncology

Radiation and inhibition of angiogenesis by canstatin synergize to induce HIF-1α–mediated tumor apoptotic switch

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Abstract

Tumor radioresponsiveness depends on endothelial cell death, which leads in turn to tumor hypoxia. Radiation-induced hypoxia was recently shown to trigger tumor radioresistance by activating angiogenesis through hypoxia-inducible factor 1–regulated (HIF-1–regulated) cytokines. We show here that combining targeted radioiodide therapy with angiogenic inhibitors, such as canstatin, enhances direct tumor cell apoptosis, thereby overcoming radio-induced HIF-1–dependent tumor survival pathways in vitro and in vivo. We found that following dual therapy, HIF-1α increases the activity of the canstatin-induced αvβ5 signaling tumor apoptotic pathway and concomitantly abrogates mitotic checkpoint and tetraploidy triggered by radiation. Apoptosis in conjunction with mitotic catastrophe leads to lethal tumor damage. We discovered that HIF-1 displays a radiosensitizing activity that is highly dependent on treatment modalities by regulating key apoptotic molecular pathways. Our findings therefore support a crucial role for angiogenesis inhibitors in shifting the fate of radiation-induced HIF-1α activity from hypoxia-induced tumor radioresistance to hypoxia-induced tumor apoptosis. This study provides a basis for developing new biology-based clinically relevant strategies to improve the efficacy of radiation oncology, using HIF-1 as an ally for cancer therapy.

Authors

Claire Magnon, Paule Opolon, Marcel Ricard, Elisabeth Connault, Patrice Ardouin, Ariane Galaup, Didier Métivier, Jean-Michel Bidart, Stéphane Germain, Michel Perricaudet, Martin Schlumberger

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Figure 5

HIF-1 mediates the control of mitosis checkpoint, aneuploidy, and haploploidy following radiation.

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HIF-1 mediates the control of mitosis checkpoint, aneuploidy, and haplop...
Cell-cycle distribution of cells exposed to escalating doses of γ-radiation (2, 16, and 32 Gy, for each dose, twice, 3 hours apart). Percentage of cells of the population found in G1, S, G2/M phase and tetraploidy for MDA-MB-231 cells (A and B), RCC cells (VHL mutated or WT) (C and D), and HUVECs (E and F). Bars indicate SEM. Each experiment was done twice. All experiments were performed with VEGF and bFGF, confirming that HIF-1 controls this checkpoint in a growth factor–independent manner.

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