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Article
Increased Expression of Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1alpha in Rat and Human Prostate Cancer.
Cancer research
  • Hua Zhong
  • Faton Agani
  • Angelo A. Baccala Jr, MD, Lehigh Valley Health Network
  • Erick Laughner
  • Natalia Rioseco-Camacho
  • William B Isaacs
  • Jonathan W Simons
  • Gregg L Semenza
Publication/Presentation Date
12-1-1998
Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a transcription factor that regulates genes involved in adaptation to hypoxia. Expression of HIF-1alpha was evaluated in rat and human prostate cancer cell lines. Increased expression of HIF-1alpha mRNA in rat prostate cancer cell lines and hypoxia-induced expression of HIF-1alpha protein in human prostate cancer cell lines are associated with increased cell growth rates and metastatic potential. HIF-1alpha mRNA was undetectable in the normal rat ventral prostate by Northern blot hybridization. HIF-1alpha protein expression and HIF-1 DNA binding activity were detected in normoxic PC-3 cells. Human prostate cancer cells plated at low density manifested higher functional HIF-1alpha expression than cells plated at high density independent of O2 tension. HIF-1alpha may become dysregulated in prostate cancer and thus drive the transcription of hypoxia-adaptive genes involved in tumor progression. This is also the first evidence that human cancer cells can express functional HIF-1alpha protein under normoxic conditions.

PubMedID
9850048
Document Type
Article
Citation Information

Zhong, H., Agani, F., Baccala, A. A., Laughner, E., Rioseco-Camacho, N., Isaacs, W. B., & ... Semenza, G. L. (1998). Increased expression of hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha in rat and human prostate cancer. Cancer Research, 58(23), 5280-5284.