Purpose: Pimonidazole binding (hypoxia) and involucrin expression (differentiation) overlap extensively in squamous cell carcinomas. This study asks whether involucrin might serve as an endogenous marker for tumor hypoxia. A second question is whether differentiation affects hypoxia-inducible metallothionein (MT) expression in normal human epithelia and squamous cell carcinomas as it does in rodent epithelia.
Experimental Design: Thirty-four patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix were infused with pimonidazole hydrochloride solution. The next day, multiple biopsies were formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded and sectioned at 4 micro m. Qualitative and quantitative analyses for involucrin expression, pimonidazole binding, and human MT-IIa mRNA expression were performed.
Results: No overall correlation between the extent of involucrin expression and pimonidazole binding was observed. The lack of correlation was because of heterogeneous patterns of immunostaining for involucrin generally related to tumor grade. Colocalized immunostaining for involucrin and pimonidazole binding was observed in intermediate grade tumors but not in well-differentiated or poorly differentiated tumors. Human MT-IIa mRNA and MT protein were expressed in basal lamina of normal human epithelia and in the proliferative rims of tumor nests.
Conclusions: Colocalization of immunostaining for involucrin and pimonidazole binding is consistent with oxygen regulation, but the lack of involucrin expression in hypoxic regions of poorly differentiated tumors indicates that its transcriptional status with respect to hypoxia induction is altered by cell differentiation. The localization of MT message and protein in the outer rims of most tumor nests indicates that the transcriptional status of metallothionein is also altered by differentiation.
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Methods Mol Biol
February 2024
Department of Oncology, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Hypoxia occurs due to inadequate levels of oxygen in tissue and has been implicated in numerous diseases such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative diseases. Hypoxia activates hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF) which mediate the expression of several downstream genes. Within the context of cancer biology, these genes affect cellular processes including metabolism, proliferation, migration, invasion, and metastasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucl Med Biol
June 2022
King's College London, School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, St. Thomas' Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK.
Purpose: The pO threshold of an ideal PET hypoxia tracer for radiotherapy planning in cancer would match those observed in clinically and biologically relevant processes such as radioresistance and HIF1α expression. To identify such tracers, we directly compared uptake in vitro of hypoxia PET tracers ([F]FMISO, [Cu]CuATSM, and analogues [Cu]CuATS, [Cu]CuATSE, [Cu]CuCTS, [Cu]CuDTS, [Cu]CuDTSE, [Cu]CuDTSM) with levels of radioresistance and HIF1α expression in cultured cancer cells under identical hypoxic conditions ranging from extreme hypoxia to normoxia. Pimonidazole uptake was also compared as a marker of hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Oncol
May 2022
Department of Pathology and Medical Biology, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Objective: Tumor hypoxia results in worse local control and patient survival. We performed a digital, single-cell-based analysis to compare two biomarkers for hypoxia (hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha [HIF-1α] and pimonidazole [PIMO]) and their effect on outcome in laryngeal cancer patients treated with accelerated radiotherapy with or without carbogen breathing and nicotinamide (AR versus ARCON).
Materials And Methods: Immunohistochemical staining was performed for HIF-1α and PIMO in consecutive sections of 44 laryngeal cancer patients randomized between AR and ARCON.
Oncol Rep
March 2020
Center for Aging and Associated Diseases, Helmy Institute for Medical Sciences, Zewail City of Science and Technology, Giza 12578, Egypt.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most aggressive human brain cancer. Little is known regarding how these cells adapt to the harsh tumor microenvironment, and consequently survive and resist various treatments. Myoglobin (MB), the oxygen‑binding hemoprotein, has been shown to be ectopically expressed in different human cancers and cell lines, and its expression is hypothesized to be an adaptation mechanism to hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Res Int
May 2020
Department of Medicine, Clinical Medicine, Dushuhu Campus, Soochow University, 199 Ren'ai Road, Suzhou, Jiangsu 215004, China.
It has been reported that F-FDG uptake is higher in hypoxic cancer cells than in well-oxygenated cells. We demonstrated that F-FDG uptake in lung cancer would be affected by high concentration oxygen breathing. .
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