Von Hippel-Lindau regulates interleukin-32β stability in ovarian cancer cells

Cited 7 time in scopus
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Title
Von Hippel-Lindau regulates interleukin-32β stability in ovarian cancer cells
Author(s)
H J Yong; J S Park; A L Jeong; S Han; S Lee; H I Ka; B Sumiyasuren; H J Joo; S J So; J Y Park; D Y Yoon; J S Lim; M S Lee; Hee Gu Lee; Y Yang
Bibliographic Citation
Oncotarget, vol. 8, no. 41, pp. 69833-69846
Publication Year
2017
Abstract
Hypoxia-induced interleukin-32β (IL-32β) shifts the metabolic program to the enhanced glycolytic pathway. In the present study, the underlying mechanism by which hypoxia-induced IL-32β stability is regulated was investigated in ovarian cancer cells. IL-32β expression increased under hypoxic conditions in ovarian cancer cells as it did in breast cancer cells. The amount of IL-32β was regulated by post-translational control rather than by transcriptional activation. Under normoxic conditions, IL-32β was continuously eliminated through ubiquitin-dependent degradation by the von-Hippel Lindau (VHL) E3 ligase complex. Oxygen deficiency or reactive oxygen species (ROS) disrupted the interaction between IL-32β and VHL, leading to the accumulation of the cytokine. The fact that IL-32β is regulated by the energy-consuming ubiquitination system implies that it plays an important role in oxidative stress. We found that IL-32β reduced protein kinase Cδ (PKCδ)-induced apoptosis under oxidative stress. This implies that the hypoxia- and ROS-stabilized IL-32β contributes to sustain survival against PKCd-induced apoptosis
Keyword
HypoxiaInterleukin-32Protein kinase CVon Hippel-LindauApoptosis
ISSN
1949-2553
Publisher
Impact Journals
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.19311
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of A.I. & Biomedical Research > Immunotherapy Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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