4.3 Article

Neutralizing S1P inhibits intratumoral hypoxia, induces vascular remodelling and sensitizes to chemotherapy in prostate cancer

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 15, Pages 13803-13821

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3144

Keywords

angiogenesis; hypoxia; sphingolipid; vessel normalization

Funding

  1. Institut National du Cancer
  2. Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer (Equipe Labellisee LIGUE)
  3. Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (ARC) [1029]
  4. Equipment ARC [ECL2010R00650]
  5. Association pour la Recherche sur les Tumeurs de la Prostate
  6. Comite Haute-Garonne of the Ligue Contre le Cancer
  7. Universite Paul Sabatier de Toulouse
  8. Association Francaise d'Urologie
  9. National Cancer Institute [5R44CA110298-06]

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Hypoxia promotes neovascularization, increased tumor growth, and therapeutic resistance. The transcription factor, hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1 alpha), has been reported as the master driver of adaptation to hypoxia. We previously identified the sphingosine kinase 1/sphingosine 1-phosphate (SphK1/S1P) pathway as a new modulator of HIF-1 alpha under hypoxia. Taking advantage of a monoclonal antibody neutralizing extracellular S1P (sphingomab), we report that inhibition of S1P extracellular signaling blocks HIF-1 alpha accumulation and activity in several cancer cell models exposed to hypoxia. In an orthotopic xenograft model of prostate cancer, we show that sphingomab reduces hypoxia and modifies vessel architecture within 5 days of treatment, leading to increased intratumoral blood perfusion. Supporting the notion that a transient vascular normalization of tumor vessels is the mechanism by which sphingomab exerts its effects, we demonstrate that administration of the antibody for 5 days before chemotherapy is more effective at local tumor control and metastatic dissemination than any other treatment scheduling. These findings validate sphingomab as a potential new normalization agent that could contribute to successful sensitization of hypoxic tumors to chemotherapy.

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