Direct Phosphorylation and Stabilization of HIF-1α By PIM1 Kinase Drives Angiogenesis in Solid Tumors

2020 
Angiogenesis is essential for sustained growth of solid tumors. Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a master regulator of angiogenesis and constitutive activation of HIF-1 is frequently observed in human cancers. Thus, understanding mechanisms governing the activation of HIF-1 is critical for successful therapeutic targeting of tumor angiogenesis.  Herein, we establish a new regulatory mechanism responsible for the constitutive activation of HIF-1α in cancer, irrespective of oxygen tension. PIM1 kinase directly phosphorylates HIF-1α at threonine 455, a previously uncharacterized site within its oxygen-dependent degradation domain. This phosphorylation event disrupts the ability of prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs) to bind and hydroxylate HIF-1α, interrupting its canonical degradation pathway and promoting constitutive transcription of HIF-1 target genes. Overexpression of PIM1 is sufficient to stabilize HIF-1α in normoxia and stimulate angiogenesis in a HIF-1-dependent manner in vivo. CRISPR mutants of HIF-1α (Thr455D) showed increased tumor growth, proliferation and angiogenesis. Moreover, T455D xenograft tumors were refractory to the anti-angiogenic and cytotoxic effects of PIM inhibitors. These data identify a new signaling axis responsible for hypoxia-independent activation of HIF-1 and expand our understanding of the tumorigenic role of PIM1 in solid tumors.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    54
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []