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Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions

We propose a novel mechanism by which cancer cells can modulate the oxygen concentration within the nucleus, potentially creating low nuclear oxygen conditions without the need of an hypoxic micro-environment and suited for allowing cancer cells to resist chemo- and radio-therapy. The cells ability...

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Autores principales: Seco, Joao, King, Clarence C., Camazzola, Gianmarco, Jansen, Jeannette, Tirinato, Luca, Marafioti, Maria G., Hanley, Rachel, Pagliari, Francesca, Beckman, Scott P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9105739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35563465
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23095077
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author Seco, Joao
King, Clarence C.
Camazzola, Gianmarco
Jansen, Jeannette
Tirinato, Luca
Marafioti, Maria G.
Hanley, Rachel
Pagliari, Francesca
Beckman, Scott P.
author_facet Seco, Joao
King, Clarence C.
Camazzola, Gianmarco
Jansen, Jeannette
Tirinato, Luca
Marafioti, Maria G.
Hanley, Rachel
Pagliari, Francesca
Beckman, Scott P.
author_sort Seco, Joao
collection PubMed
description We propose a novel mechanism by which cancer cells can modulate the oxygen concentration within the nucleus, potentially creating low nuclear oxygen conditions without the need of an hypoxic micro-environment and suited for allowing cancer cells to resist chemo- and radio-therapy. The cells ability to alter intra-cellular oxygen conditions depends on the amount of cholesterol present within the cellular membranes, where high levels of cholesterol can yield rigid membranes that slow oxygen diffusion. The proposed mechanism centers on the competition between (1) the diffusion of oxygen within the cell and across cellular membranes that replenishes any consumed oxygen and (2) the consumption of oxygen in the mitochondria, peroxisomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), etc. The novelty of our work centers around the assumption that the cholesterol content of a membrane can affect the oxygen diffusion across the membrane, reducing the cell ability to replenish the oxygen consumed within the cell. For these conditions, the effective diffusion rate of oxygen becomes of the same order as the oxygen consumption rate, allowing the cell to reduce the oxygen concentration of the nucleus, with implications to the Warburg Effect. The cellular and nucleus oxygen content is indirectly evaluated experimentally for bladder (T24) cancer cells and during the cell cycle, where the cells are initially synchronized using hydroxeaurea (HU) at the late G1-phase/early S-phase. The analysis of cellular and nucleus oxygen concentration during cell cycle is performed via (i) RT-qPCR gene analysis of hypoxia inducible transcription factors (HIF) and prolyl hydroxylases (PHD) and (ii) radiation clonogenic assay every 2 h, after release from synchronization. The HIF/PHD genes allowed us to correlate cellular oxygen with oxygen concentration in the nucleus that is obtained from the cells radiation response, where the amount DNA damage due to radiation is directly related to the amount of oxygen present in the nucleus. We demonstrate that during the S-phase cells can become hypoxic in the late S-phase/early G2-phase and therefore the radiation resistance increases 2- to 3-fold.
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spelling pubmed-91057392022-05-14 Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions Seco, Joao King, Clarence C. Camazzola, Gianmarco Jansen, Jeannette Tirinato, Luca Marafioti, Maria G. Hanley, Rachel Pagliari, Francesca Beckman, Scott P. Int J Mol Sci Article We propose a novel mechanism by which cancer cells can modulate the oxygen concentration within the nucleus, potentially creating low nuclear oxygen conditions without the need of an hypoxic micro-environment and suited for allowing cancer cells to resist chemo- and radio-therapy. The cells ability to alter intra-cellular oxygen conditions depends on the amount of cholesterol present within the cellular membranes, where high levels of cholesterol can yield rigid membranes that slow oxygen diffusion. The proposed mechanism centers on the competition between (1) the diffusion of oxygen within the cell and across cellular membranes that replenishes any consumed oxygen and (2) the consumption of oxygen in the mitochondria, peroxisomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), etc. The novelty of our work centers around the assumption that the cholesterol content of a membrane can affect the oxygen diffusion across the membrane, reducing the cell ability to replenish the oxygen consumed within the cell. For these conditions, the effective diffusion rate of oxygen becomes of the same order as the oxygen consumption rate, allowing the cell to reduce the oxygen concentration of the nucleus, with implications to the Warburg Effect. The cellular and nucleus oxygen content is indirectly evaluated experimentally for bladder (T24) cancer cells and during the cell cycle, where the cells are initially synchronized using hydroxeaurea (HU) at the late G1-phase/early S-phase. The analysis of cellular and nucleus oxygen concentration during cell cycle is performed via (i) RT-qPCR gene analysis of hypoxia inducible transcription factors (HIF) and prolyl hydroxylases (PHD) and (ii) radiation clonogenic assay every 2 h, after release from synchronization. The HIF/PHD genes allowed us to correlate cellular oxygen with oxygen concentration in the nucleus that is obtained from the cells radiation response, where the amount DNA damage due to radiation is directly related to the amount of oxygen present in the nucleus. We demonstrate that during the S-phase cells can become hypoxic in the late S-phase/early G2-phase and therefore the radiation resistance increases 2- to 3-fold. MDPI 2022-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9105739/ /pubmed/35563465 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23095077 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Seco, Joao
King, Clarence C.
Camazzola, Gianmarco
Jansen, Jeannette
Tirinato, Luca
Marafioti, Maria G.
Hanley, Rachel
Pagliari, Francesca
Beckman, Scott P.
Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title_full Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title_fullStr Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title_short Modulating Nucleus Oxygen Concentration by Altering Intramembrane Cholesterol Levels: Creating Hypoxic Nucleus in Oxic Conditions
title_sort modulating nucleus oxygen concentration by altering intramembrane cholesterol levels: creating hypoxic nucleus in oxic conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9105739/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35563465
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23095077
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