Abstract
Melanomagenesis is a complex phenomenon in which environmental, genetic and host factors play a role. Sun burns in early childhood are a known risk factor in melanoma development. Alteration of prosurvival genes such as Ras and Akt and loss of function of the p16INK4a-CDK4/6-pRb and p14 ARF-HDM2-p53 pathways are strongly associated with human melanoma. We have demonstrated that normally occurring skin hypoxia represents a previously unappreciated host promoting factor in melanomagenesis. Melanocytes that express oncogenes such as Akt, and are therefore genetically unstable, show a transform phenotype only in a mild hypoxic environment that resembles the hypoxic status of the skin. Hypoxia, therefore, is not just a prerogative of advanced neoplasia; physiologic tissue hypoxia, through the activity of HIF1α, can function as a promoting factor in tumorigenesis. ©2006 Landes Bioscience.
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Bedogni, B., & Powell, M. B. (2006, June 15). Skin hypoxia: A promoting environmental factor in melanomagenesis. Cell Cycle. Taylor and Francis Inc. https://doi.org/10.4161/cc.5.12.2810
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