The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers

Identifying exploitable differences between cancer cells and normal cells has been ongoing since the dawn of cancer therapeutics. This task has proven difficult due to the complex genetic makeup of cancers. Tumours, however, share a low oxygen (hypoxic) microenvironment that selects for malignant ca...

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Main Author: Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex
Other Authors: Lee, Stephen
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26198
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-6691
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-261982018-01-05T19:01:43Z The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex Lee, Stephen Hypoxia Translation Tumour Microenvironment Cancer eIF4E2 Identifying exploitable differences between cancer cells and normal cells has been ongoing since the dawn of cancer therapeutics. This task has proven difficult due to the complex genetic makeup of cancers. Tumours, however, share a low oxygen (hypoxic) microenvironment that selects for malignant cancer cells. It has recently been shown that cells switch from eIF4E to eIF4E2-mediated protein synthesis during periods of hypoxia, similar to those found in tumour cores. We hypothesize that this hypoxic translation complex is required for cell survival in hypoxia and can be targeted by inhibiting the eIF4E2 cap-binding protein. Here, we show that genetically diverse cancer cells require the cap-binding protein eIF4E2 for their growth, proliferation, and resistance to apoptosis in hypoxia, but not in normoxia. Furthermore, in vitro and in vivo eIF4E2-depleted tumour models cannot grow or sustain hypoxic regions without the reintroduction of exogenous eIF4E2. Thus, tumour cells could be targeted over somatic cells by selectively inhibiting their protein synthesis machinery, much like the function of antibiotics that revolutionized medicine. 2013-09-30T17:53:12Z 2014-10-01T08:00:07Z 2013 2013 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26198 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-6691 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Hypoxia
Translation
Tumour Microenvironment
Cancer
eIF4E2
spellingShingle Hypoxia
Translation
Tumour Microenvironment
Cancer
eIF4E2
Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex
The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
description Identifying exploitable differences between cancer cells and normal cells has been ongoing since the dawn of cancer therapeutics. This task has proven difficult due to the complex genetic makeup of cancers. Tumours, however, share a low oxygen (hypoxic) microenvironment that selects for malignant cancer cells. It has recently been shown that cells switch from eIF4E to eIF4E2-mediated protein synthesis during periods of hypoxia, similar to those found in tumour cores. We hypothesize that this hypoxic translation complex is required for cell survival in hypoxia and can be targeted by inhibiting the eIF4E2 cap-binding protein. Here, we show that genetically diverse cancer cells require the cap-binding protein eIF4E2 for their growth, proliferation, and resistance to apoptosis in hypoxia, but not in normoxia. Furthermore, in vitro and in vivo eIF4E2-depleted tumour models cannot grow or sustain hypoxic regions without the reintroduction of exogenous eIF4E2. Thus, tumour cells could be targeted over somatic cells by selectively inhibiting their protein synthesis machinery, much like the function of antibiotics that revolutionized medicine.
author2 Lee, Stephen
author_facet Lee, Stephen
Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex
author Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex
author_sort Perera, Joseph Kishan Rex
title The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
title_short The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
title_full The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
title_fullStr The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
title_full_unstemmed The eIF4E2-Mediated Hypoxic Protein Synthesis Complex Permits Tumourigenesis in Several Genetically Distinct Cancers
title_sort eif4e2-mediated hypoxic protein synthesis complex permits tumourigenesis in several genetically distinct cancers
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26198
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-6691
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