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Blocking hypoxia-induced autophagy in tumors restores cytotoxic T-cell activity and promotes regression

Authors :
Bozena Kaminska
Kris Van Moer
Muhammad Zaeem Noman
Sandrine Pierson
Stéphanie Buart
Salem Chouaib
Fathia Mami-Chouaib
Bassam Janji
Pedro Romero
Piotr Przanowski
Guy Berchem
Source :
Cancer research. 71(18)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The relationship between hypoxic stress, autophagy, and specific cell-mediated cytotoxicity remains unknown. This study shows that hypoxia-induced resistance of lung tumor to cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL)–mediated lysis is associated with autophagy induction in target cells. In turn, this correlates with STAT3 phosphorylation on tyrosine 705 residue (pSTAT3) and HIF-1α accumulation. Inhibition of autophagy by siRNA targeting of either beclin1 or Atg5 resulted in impairment of pSTAT3 and restoration of hypoxic tumor cell susceptibility to CTL-mediated lysis. Furthermore, inhibition of pSTAT3 in hypoxic Atg5 or beclin1-targeted tumor cells was found to be associated with the inhibition Src kinase (pSrc). Autophagy-induced pSTAT3 and pSrc regulation seemed to involve the ubiquitin proteasome system and p62/SQSTM1. In vivo experiments using B16-F10 melanoma tumor cells indicated that depletion of beclin1 resulted in an inhibition of B16-F10 tumor growth and increased tumor apoptosis. Moreover, in vivo inhibition of autophagy by hydroxychloroquine in B16-F10 tumor-bearing mice and mice vaccinated with tyrosinase-related protein-2 peptide dramatically increased tumor growth inhibition. Collectively, this study establishes a novel functional link between hypoxia-induced autophagy and the regulation of antigen-specific T-cell lysis and points to a major role of autophagy in the control of in vivo tumor growth. Cancer Res; 71(18); 5976–86. ©2011 AACR.

Details

ISSN :
15387445
Volume :
71
Issue :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....561b4d2e51e5b5ad24b6de3a5fc299a9