Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Induction of dormancy in hypoxic human papillomavirus-positive cancer cells

2017; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 114; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.1615758114

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Karin Hoppe‐Seyler, Felicitas Bossler, Claudia Lohrey, Julia Bulkescher, Frank Rösl, Lars Jansen, Arnulf Mayer, Peter Vaupel, Matthias Dürst, Felix Hoppe‐Seyler,

Tópico(s)

Cancer Research and Treatments

Resumo

Oncogenic human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are closely linked to major human malignancies, including cervical and head and neck cancers. It is widely assumed that HPV-positive cancer cells are under selection pressure to continuously express the viral E6/E7 oncogenes, that their intracellular p53 levels are reconstituted on E6/E7 repression, and that E6/E7 inhibition phenotypically results in cellular senescence. Here we show that hypoxic conditions, as are often found in subregions of cervical and head and neck cancers, enable HPV-positive cancer cells to escape from these regulatory principles: E6/E7 is efficiently repressed, yet, p53 levels do not increase. Moreover, E6/E7 repression under hypoxia does not result in cellular senescence, owing to hypoxia-associated impaired mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling via the inhibitory REDD1/TSC2 axis. Instead, a reversible growth arrest is induced that can be overcome by reoxygenation. Impairment of mTOR signaling also interfered with the senescence response of hypoxic HPV-positive cancer cells toward prosenescent chemotherapy in vitro. Collectively, these findings indicate that hypoxic HPV-positive cancer cells can induce a reversible state of dormancy, with decreased viral antigen synthesis and increased therapeutic resistance, and may serve as reservoirs for tumor recurrence on reoxygenation.

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