Decursin promotes HIF-1α proteasomal degradation and immune responses in hypoxic tumour microenvironment

Yun Ge, Soo Hyun Yoon, Hyeonha Jang, Ji Hak Jeong, You Mie Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Hypoxia and HIF-1α are important regulators of tumour growth and angiogenesis and could be attractive targets for cancer therapeutics. Decursin is an active compound extracted from the roots of Angelica gigas and has been shown to have potent anti-cancer and anti-angiogenic activities. However, whether decursin regulates HIF-1α activity and immune responses under hypoxic conditions is not yet understood. Purpose: The aim of this study was to identify whether decursin exhibits anti-cancer activity by targeting HIF-1α. Study design: We investigated whether decursin regulates HIF-1α protein stability and increases its degradation. In addition, we determined if decursin increases immune responses in tumour microenvironment to identify its hypoxia-associated anti-cancer activities. Materials and methods: We performed the hypoxia-responsive element promoter–reporter assay, Western blot analysis, immune-fluorescence assay, semi-quantitative RT-PCR and ELISA for VEGF secretion, CCK-8 assay for cell proliferation, TUNEL assay for apoptosis and invasion assay in A549 human lung cancer or HCT116 human colon cancer cells. In vivo Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) allograft mouse model was used to check tumour growth and immune responses in tumour microenvironment by immunohistochemistry analysis. Results: We observed that decursin inhibited HIF-1 activation under hypoxia by down-regulating the protein level of its subunit HIF-1α. It increased oxygen-dependant hydroxylation and ubiquitination of HIF-1α to promote HIF-1α degradation. Decursin also decreased mRNA expression of HIF-1α target genes. Decursin suppressed cancer cell proliferation, induced apoptosis and inhibited cancer cell invasion under hypoxia in cancer cells. In the allograft mouse tumour model, decursin reduced the hypoxic area and HIF-1α and PD-L1 expression. Infiltrating T cells (CD3+), helper T cells (CD4+) and cytotoxic (CD8+) T cells were accumulated, but regulatory T cells (Foxp3) and myeloid-derived suppressor cell-mediated immune suppressors (Arg1) were attenuated by decursin. Conclusion: Our results suggest that decursin is a novel HIF-1α inhibitor that functions by promoting its proteasomal degradation and that it also helps improve T cell activation in tumour microenvironment; these findings provide new explanations about its anti-cancer and anti-angiogenic activity mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number153318
JournalPhytomedicine
Volume78
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020

Keywords

  • Anti-cancer
  • Decursin
  • HIF-1α
  • Hypoxia
  • Immune response
  • Proteasomal degradation

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