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Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors

The receptor tyrosine kinase MET and its ligand, the Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scattor Factor (HGF/SF), are essential to the migration, morphogenesis, and survival of epithelial cells. In addition, dysregulation of MET signaling has been shown to promote tumor progression and invasion in many cancers...

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Autores principales: Mekki, Meriem Sarah, Mougel, Alexandra, Vinchent, Audrey, Paquet, Charlotte, Copin, Marie-Christine, Leroy, Catherine, Kherrouche, Zoulika, Bonte, Jean-Paul, Melnyk, Oleg, Vicogne, Jérôme, Tulasne, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6007473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29930749
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25472
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author Mekki, Meriem Sarah
Mougel, Alexandra
Vinchent, Audrey
Paquet, Charlotte
Copin, Marie-Christine
Leroy, Catherine
Kherrouche, Zoulika
Bonte, Jean-Paul
Melnyk, Oleg
Vicogne, Jérôme
Tulasne, David
author_facet Mekki, Meriem Sarah
Mougel, Alexandra
Vinchent, Audrey
Paquet, Charlotte
Copin, Marie-Christine
Leroy, Catherine
Kherrouche, Zoulika
Bonte, Jean-Paul
Melnyk, Oleg
Vicogne, Jérôme
Tulasne, David
author_sort Mekki, Meriem Sarah
collection PubMed
description The receptor tyrosine kinase MET and its ligand, the Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scattor Factor (HGF/SF), are essential to the migration, morphogenesis, and survival of epithelial cells. In addition, dysregulation of MET signaling has been shown to promote tumor progression and invasion in many cancers. Therefore, HGF/SF and MET are major targets for chemotherapies. Improvement of targeted therapies requires a perfect understanding of tumor microenvironment that strongly modifies half-life, bio-accessibility and thus, efficacy of treatments. In particular, hypoxia is a crucial microenvironmental phenomenon promoting invasion and resistance to treatments. Under hypoxia, MET auto-phosphorylation resulting from ligand stimulation or from receptor overexpression is drastically decreased within minutes of oxygen deprivation but is quickly reversible upon return to normoxia. Besides a decreased phosphorylation of its proximal adaptor GAB1 under hypoxia, activation of the downstream kinases Erk and Akt is maintained, while still being dependent on MET receptor. Consistently, several cellular responses induced by HGF/SF, including motility, morphogenesis, and survival are effectively induced under hypoxia. Interestingly, using a semi-synthetic ligand, we show that HGF/SF binding to MET is strongly impaired during hypoxia but can be quickly restored upon reoxygenation. Finally, we show that two MET-targeting tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are less efficient on MET signalling under hypoxia. Like MET loss of phosphorylation, this hypoxia-induced resistance to TKIs is reversible under normoxia. Thus, although hypoxia does not affect downstream signaling or cellular responses induced by MET, it causes immediate resistance to TKIs. These results may prove useful when designing and evaluation of MET-targeted therapies against cancer.
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spelling pubmed-60074732018-06-21 Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors Mekki, Meriem Sarah Mougel, Alexandra Vinchent, Audrey Paquet, Charlotte Copin, Marie-Christine Leroy, Catherine Kherrouche, Zoulika Bonte, Jean-Paul Melnyk, Oleg Vicogne, Jérôme Tulasne, David Oncotarget Research Paper The receptor tyrosine kinase MET and its ligand, the Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scattor Factor (HGF/SF), are essential to the migration, morphogenesis, and survival of epithelial cells. In addition, dysregulation of MET signaling has been shown to promote tumor progression and invasion in many cancers. Therefore, HGF/SF and MET are major targets for chemotherapies. Improvement of targeted therapies requires a perfect understanding of tumor microenvironment that strongly modifies half-life, bio-accessibility and thus, efficacy of treatments. In particular, hypoxia is a crucial microenvironmental phenomenon promoting invasion and resistance to treatments. Under hypoxia, MET auto-phosphorylation resulting from ligand stimulation or from receptor overexpression is drastically decreased within minutes of oxygen deprivation but is quickly reversible upon return to normoxia. Besides a decreased phosphorylation of its proximal adaptor GAB1 under hypoxia, activation of the downstream kinases Erk and Akt is maintained, while still being dependent on MET receptor. Consistently, several cellular responses induced by HGF/SF, including motility, morphogenesis, and survival are effectively induced under hypoxia. Interestingly, using a semi-synthetic ligand, we show that HGF/SF binding to MET is strongly impaired during hypoxia but can be quickly restored upon reoxygenation. Finally, we show that two MET-targeting tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are less efficient on MET signalling under hypoxia. Like MET loss of phosphorylation, this hypoxia-induced resistance to TKIs is reversible under normoxia. Thus, although hypoxia does not affect downstream signaling or cellular responses induced by MET, it causes immediate resistance to TKIs. These results may prove useful when designing and evaluation of MET-targeted therapies against cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2018-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6007473/ /pubmed/29930749 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25472 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Mekki et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Mekki, Meriem Sarah
Mougel, Alexandra
Vinchent, Audrey
Paquet, Charlotte
Copin, Marie-Christine
Leroy, Catherine
Kherrouche, Zoulika
Bonte, Jean-Paul
Melnyk, Oleg
Vicogne, Jérôme
Tulasne, David
Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title_full Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title_fullStr Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title_short Hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the MET receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
title_sort hypoxia leads to decreased autophosphorylation of the met receptor but promotes its resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6007473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29930749
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25472
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