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      Dexamethasone inhibits stemness maintenance and enhances chemosensitivity of hepatocellular carcinoma stem cells by inducing deSUMOylation of HIF-1α and Oct4

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          Abstract

          It has been controversial whether patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) should receive glucocorticoid therapy during chemotherapy. Recent studies have demonstrated that glucocorticoids increase the therapeutic sensitivity of tumors to some chemotherapeutic drugs, but the specific mechanism remains unclear. In the present study, dexamethasone (Dex) was used to treat HCC stem cells. The results demonstrated that Dex reduced stemness maintenance and self-renewal of HCC stem cells, promoted epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, inhibited migration and angiogenesis and, more importantly, increased cell sensitivity to the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase/ganciclovir drug system in vitro and in vivo. Further mechanistic analyses demonstrated that Dex inhibited small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) modification of several proteins in HCC stem cells, including hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α, an important hypoxia tolerance protein, and octamer-binding transcription factor 4 (Oct4), a crucial stemness maintenance protein. Inducing deSUMOylation of HIF-1α and Oct4 reduced their accumulation in the nucleus, thereby inhibiting tumor angiogenesis and stemness maintenance. These findings provide a new perspective to the study of the mechanism underlying the anti-hepatocarcinogenesis effects of Dex. Due to the few side effects of glucocorticoids at low doses and their anti-inflammatory effects, the appropriate combination of glucocorticoids and chemotherapeutic drugs is expected to improve the survival of HCC patients and their prognosis.

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          Most cited references39

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          The diagnosis and treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.

          Hepatocellular carcinoma is a leading cancer worldwide. Its incidence is increasing, and is closely related to advanced liver disease. Cirrhosis represents the greatest risk factor for this malignancy, and is the main indication for screening and surveillance. The diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma can frequently, and uniquely, be made on characteristic multiphase contrast based cross-sectional imaging rather than strict need for tissue sampling. Despite advances in medical, locoregional and surgical therapies, hepatocellular carcinoma remains one of the most common causes of cancer-related death globally. In this review, current approaches to management of hepatocellular carcinoma are discussed, which incorporate both tumor and patient factors. The salient considerations in surgical (resection, liver transplantation), locoregional (ablation and embolic therapies) and medical therapies are highlighted.
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            HIF-2alpha regulates Oct-4: effects of hypoxia on stem cell function, embryonic development, and tumor growth.

            The division, differentiation, and function of stem cells and multipotent progenitors are influenced by complex signals in the microenvironment, including oxygen availability. Using a genetic "knock-in" strategy, we demonstrate that targeted replacement of the oxygen-regulated transcription factor HIF-1alpha with HIF-2alpha results in expanded expression of HIF-2alpha-specific target genes including Oct-4, a transcription factor essential for maintaining stem cell pluripotency. We show that HIF-2alpha, but not HIF-1alpha, binds to the Oct-4 promoter and induces Oct-4 expression and transcriptional activity, thereby contributing to impaired development in homozygous Hif-2alpha KI/KI embryos, defective hematopoietic stem cell differentiation in embryoid bodies, and large embryonic stem cell (ES)-derived tumors characterized by altered cellular differentiation. Furthermore, loss of HIF-2alpha severely reduces the number of embryonic primordial germ cells, which require Oct-4 expression for survival and/or maintenance. These results identify Oct-4 as a HIF-2alpha-specific target gene and indicate that HIF-2alpha can regulate stem cell function and/or differentiation through activation of Oct-4, which in turn contributes to HIF-2alpha's tumor promoting activity.
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              Hypoxic tumor microenvironment activates GLI2 via HIF-1α and TGF-β2 to promote chemoresistance in colorectal cancer

              Colorectal cancer patients often relapse after chemotherapy, owing to the survival of stem or progenitor cells referred to as cancer stem cells (CSCs). Although tumor stromal factors are known to contribute to chemoresistance, it remains not fully understood how CSCs in the hypoxic tumor microenvironment escape the chemotherapy. Here, we report that hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1α) and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs)-secreted TGF-β2 converge to activate the expression of hedgehog transcription factor GLI2 in CSCs, resulting in increased stemness/dedifferentiation and intrinsic resistance to chemotherapy. Genetic or small-molecule inhibitor-based ablation of HIF-1α/TGF-β2-mediated GLI2 signaling effectively reversed the chemoresistance caused by the tumor microenvironment. Importantly, high expression levels of HIF-1α/TGF-β2/GLI2 correlated robustly with the patient relapse following chemotherapy, highlighting a potential biomarker and therapeutic target for chemoresistance in colorectal cancer. Our study thus uncovers a molecular mechanism by which hypoxic colorectal tumor microenvironment promotes cancer cell stemness and resistance to chemotherapy and suggests a potentially targeted treatment approach to mitigating chemoresistance.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Oncol
                Int. J. Oncol
                IJO
                International Journal of Oncology
                D.A. Spandidos
                1019-6439
                1791-2423
                September 2020
                08 July 2020
                08 July 2020
                : 57
                : 3
                : 780-790
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Pathology, Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) General Hospital, Beijing 100853
                [2 ]Department of Pathology
                [3 ]Tianjin Key Laboratory of Epigenetics for Organ Development in Preterm Infants, The Fifth Central Hospital of Tianjin, Tianjin 300450
                [4 ]Department of Pharmacy, Binhai New Area Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Tianjin 300450
                [5 ]Central Laboratory
                [6 ]Department of Pharmacy, The Fifth Central Hospital of Tianjin, Tianjin 300450
                [7 ]Department of General Surgery, Peking University First Hospital, Beijing 100031
                [8 ]Department of General Surgery, The Fifth Central Hospital of Tianjin, Tianjin 300450, P.R. China
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Dr WenHan Wu, Department of General Surgery, Peking University First Hospital, 8 Xishku Street, Xicheng, Beijing 100031, P.R. China, E-mail: wuwenhan88@ 123456126.com
                Dr Po Zhao, Department of Pathology, Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) General Hospital, 28 Fuxing Road, Beijing 100853, P.R. China, Email: zhaopo301@ 123456163.com
                [*]

                Contributed equally

                Article
                ijo-57-03-0780
                10.3892/ijo.2020.5097
                7384854
                32705164
                610d2d58-b39a-4391-b447-21c7d9c87b59
                Copyright: © Jiang et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 09 March 2020
                : 25 June 2020
                Categories
                Articles

                hepatocellular carcinoma,cancer stem cells,glucocorticoids,sumoylation,herpes simplex virus 1 thymidine kinase/ganciclovir,hypoxia inducible factor-1α,octamer-binding transcription factor 4

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