Abstract
Dormant cancer cells are starvation-resistant leading to problems in the management of cancer. In renal cell carcinomas (RCCs), starvation-resistant cells are resistant to various currently available therapies. However, targeting hypoxia inducible factor 2-alpha (HIF2-alpha) induces cell death in dormantlike/ starvation-resistant RCCs. This study showed that the apoptotic cell death caused by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-induced ligand (TNFSF10/ TRAIL) was attenuated by CASP8 and FADD-like apoptosis regulator (CFLAR/c- FLIP) following HIF2-alpha activation, despite the high expression of TRAIL in such RCCs. Knockdowns of TRAIL averted apoptotic cell death caused by HIF2-alpha inhibition in starvation-resistant RCCs. Knockdowns of both HIF2-alpha and c-FLIP augmented apoptotic cell death, whereas overexpression of c-FLIP completely averted apoptosis. In addition, high abundance of TRAIL was correlated with poor prognosis in patients with RCC, suggesting that TRAIL, followed by HIF2-alpha and c-FLIP, play a role in the survival and/or progression of malignant RCCs.
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Isono, T., Chano, T., Yoshida, T., Kageyama, S., Kawauchi, A., Yonese, J., & Yuasa, T. (2018). Abundance of TRAIL attenuated by HIF2a and c-FLIP affects malignancy in renal cell carcinomas. Oncotarget, 9(33), 23091–23101. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25214
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