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Oxygen concentration is tightly regulated at the tissue and cellular levels because of its essential role in many biological processes. Hyperoxia can induce the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which may cause genotoxic effects or cell death. In contrast, hypoxia can have extensive downstream transcriptional effects, such as activation of pro-apoptotic and pro-angiogenic pathways. Nonpathological cells have regulatory mechanisms to quickly respond to variations in oxygen tension by the hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs). Neoplastic cells employ oxygen-sensitive activity of the HIF proteins. The HIFs also have higher basal activity in the neoplastic compartment. However, this enhanced level of transcriptional activity is not fully understood. It can be partly attributed to the state of oxygenation within a tumour, which is not consistent and behaves in a cyclical nature. The flux in oxygen tension experienced by cancer cells is an effect of several tumour characteristics such as chaotic vasculature, poor oxygen diffusion across an ever-expanding tumour, and irregular blood flow. Several studies have shown that the constant acute cycling of hypoxic regions in a tumour leads to enhanced metastatic potential and HIF transcriptional activity beyond what is typical of healthy tissue (Cairns et al, 2001; Peng et al, 2006). Oxygenation status of tumour tissue cycles in both spatial and temporal manner. Studies in mice utilising window chamber imaging techniques demonstrated that hypoxic cycling occurs often in regions of microvasculature because of the instability of red blood cell flow through the vessels (Kimura et al, 1996). Consequently, this regional cycling results in fluctuating HIF activity, which has been shown to directly correlate to tumour radiation resistance (Moeller et al, 2004; Dewhirst et al, 2008). Recent experimental evidence has expanded on the role of hypoxia in cancer by demonstrating differential responses to hypoxia between heterogenic sub-populations within the tumour. One of these populations, termed cancer stem cells (CSCs), possess many phenotypic similarities to normal stem cells, such as having the ability to upregulate DNA repair kinases to evade radiation-induced genomic damage (Bao et al, 2006a). Although somewhat controversial, hypoxia has become increasingly related to the cancer stem cell phenotype. The role of HIFs in these cells has become an important focus in understanding tumour growth and survival (Hill et al, 2009).

Stem-like cells in solid tumours

Virchow proposed the embryonic rest theory in cancer (Virchow, 1858) 150 years ago. In the early twentieth century several connections were made between cancer cells and less-differentiated normal cells. In a seminal work, the Dick laboratory isolated patient-derived stem-like leukaemia cells that were capable of initiating de novo leukaemia in SCID mice (Lapidot et al, 1994). They also demonstrated that myeloid leukaemia cells were organised as a hierarchy and originated from a primitive haematopoietic cell (Bonnet and Dick, 1997). Dick's studies in leukaemia were furthered by Clarke and colleagues (Al-Hajj et al, 2003) through application of the hierarchical principle to breast cancer. They discovered a subset of cells that could be prospectively enriched in their cultures by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) for surface markers typically associated with normal stem cells, CD44 and CD24 (Al-Hajj et al, 2003). The cells that expressed this marker pattern were shown to be more tumourigenic in SCID mice. In addition, tumours arising from this sub-population maintained the phenotypic heterogeneity present in the primary tumour, suggesting that the stem-like sub-population within breast cancer was primarily responsible for the formation of tumour and establishment of neoplastic heterogeneity. These cells, known as cancer stem cells, tumour initiating cells, or tumour propagating cells, utilise many unique survival techniques to propagate the tumour, some of which are similar to those found in normal somatic stem cells. Since this early work, several groups have demonstrated the presence of cancer stem cells in other solid tumours, including malignant glioma and colorectal cancer (Singh et al, 2003; Ricci-Vitiani et al, 2007).

Cancer stem cells contribute to tumour growth, maintainence, and recurrence after therapy through multiple mechanisms and networks. One important characteristic of these cells is their ability to restrict DNA damage sustained during radiation or chemotherapy by reduction of ROS and enhanced activity of DNA checkpoint kinases (Bao et al, 2006a; Diehn et al, 2009). By preventing DNA damage, the cancer stem cell population survives injury and can continue to propagate the tumour. CSC were also shown to be dependant on the Akt signalling pathways, as the cancer stem cell sub-population had increased sensitivity to chemical Akt inhibitors (Eyler et al, 2008). To enrich in vitro cultures for this population, sorting protocols were developed that took advantage of unique markers expressed by cancer stem cells when compared with the bulk of the tumour (Figure 1). Additional experimental evidence has demonstrated that one of the important roles the cancer stem cell population has in a tumour is in regulating tumour angiogenesis by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signalling.

Figure 1
figure 1

Enrichment of cultures for cancer stem cells allow for better study of their unique biology. In order to appropriately examine the biological significance of the cancer stem cell population, in vitro cultures must be enriched for this population before experimental investigation. Utilising animal models, such as immunocompromised mice, patient-derived cancer cells can be expanded for use in the laboratory. Following resection of the tumour from the patient, the mass is dissociated into single cells through a combination of mechanical and enzymatic digestion. Once the cells have recovered and are growing as single cells, they can be sorted based on surface marker expression. Experimental evidence has demonstrated that the cancer stem cell sub-population express a subset of genes that can act as markers for enriching cultures for the stem-like cancer cells (Singh et al, 2003). The present gold standard of these markers in glioma is the surface protein, CD133 (also known as Prominin-1). CD133 can be used in cell sorting to discern the cancer stem cell sub-population. Although little is known about its role in cancer biology, (A) CD133 expression has been observed on a sub-population of cells in the tumour tissue and (B) this expression is maintained in the cancer stem cell population in vitro. In (A) a subcutaneous tumour was resected out of a mouse, fixed in paraformaldehyde, and frozen. Sections of the tumour were cut and stained for CD133 (red) and nuclei (Hoescht 3342, blue). In (B) cancer stem cells enriched from glioblastoma multiforme were cultured in serum-free media until they formed spheroids (neurospheres). The cells were then fixed, frozen, and cut. The sections were stained for CD133 (green) and nuclei (Hoescht 3342, blue). This procedure allowed for direct staining of cells throughout the sphere. Once the tumour cells have been separated into cancer stem cell (CSC)-enriched and non-CSC populations, experiments can be carried out to elucidate the biological differences between the two populations. The most important way to test CSC biology is the ability of the cancer stem cells to form tumours that are phenotypic copies of the parental tumour. In the glioma system, one way to determine a cells tumourigenic capacity is direct intracranial implantation. In this way, the tumour formation capacity of cancer cells allows researchers to delineate the stem-like fraction of cells within a tumour.

Angiogenesis is essential for tumour survival and is the canonical downstream effect of HIF transcriptional activity. As cells grow and divide, the neoplastic compartment rapidly expands past the diffusion distance of oxygen in tissue (∼100 μm). Large regions of the tumour become hypoxic because of this spatial limitation. The immediate cellular response (mediated by HIF proteins) is the influx of new vessels to provide appropriate oxygenation to the tumour tissue. However, vessel ingrowth cannot maintain proper tissue oxygenation when faced with the rapid cellular expansion of a tumour. This constant imbalance between cell and vessel growth causes a fluctuating oxygen state. These transient states of hypoxia are a common characteristic of solid tumours. Although normal oxygen tension in healthy tissue is approximately 7% oxygen (53 mmHg), this tension in a tumour can range from physiological (∼7%) to severe (<1%) oxygen. Severe hypoxia is less frequent but commonly found surrounding areas of necrosis, which is another common characteristic of solid tumours. The immediate molecular response to low oxygen is stabilisation of the HIF proteins. Hypoxia inducible factors stimulate the expansion and migration of endothelial cells into the tumour space, which allow new vessel growth from the existing vasculature structure surrounding the tumour. The formation of these vessels supplies the rapidly expanding tumour with nutrients and oxygen. However, the vasculature is very chaotic and does not transfer nutrients and oxygen efficiently (Baish and Jain, 1998). This is thought to be a consequence of the number of angiogenic signals coming from the neoplastic cell population, such as VEGF and the angiopoietins. However, until recently it was hypothesised that the majority of cells in the tumour were capable of regulating this angiogenic signal. It is now known that there is heterogenic expression of VEGF within a tumour. The cancer stem cell sub-population has been shown to be the primary regulator of angiogenesis in a tumour by the production of VEGF (Bao et al, 2006b). The chaotic vessel formation is another factor in the constant oxygen flux observed in solid tumours (Carmeliet and Jain, 2000). High frequency of cycling (acute) hypoxia correlates to lower patient survival. This sensitivity of tumour structure to oxygen status is driven by the HIF proteins in the cancer stem cell population.

Oxygen sensitive HIF activity

The HIFs are transcription factors whose expression and stability is regulated by oxygen tension. They exist as a heterodimer, consisting of an alpha and beta subunit. There are three isoforms of the alpha subunit: HIF1α, HIF2α (also known as endothelial PAS-domain protein 1, EPAS1), and HIF3α. The HIFβ isoforms, also known as aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT and ARNT2), are constitutively and ubiquitously expressed across many cell types (Maltepe et al, 1997; Keith et al, 2001). The present understanding of HIF regulation has described the majority of oxygen-controlled HIF regulation occurring on the alpha subunit, whereas the beta subunit is not sensitive to oxygen levels and is constitutively present in the nucleus. The HIF1α subunit is a basic helix-loop-helix protein whose structure and function is evolutionarily conserved between mice and humans (Iyer et al, 1998). Hypoxia inducible factor-1α has been well-studied and is ubiquitously expressed in normal tissue. Further studies characterized a second HIFα isoform as also being tightly regulated by oxygen tension. Since its initial discovery, HIF2α was demonstrated to have shared transcriptional targets with HIF1α such as VEGF, Tie-2, Ang2, and Flt1 (VEGF-R1). HIF1α and HIF2α also bind homologous target DNA-binding sequences (Lau et al, 2007). Despite their similarities, HIF2α expression was restricted to endothelial cells of vascular organs and had several unique transcriptional targets such as Oct4 and TGFα. These targets are outside the canonical pro-angiogenic hypoxic response, which suggests an important and specific role for HIF2α in regulating other cellular processes such as pluripotency. Little is known about the third HIFα isoform. Several splice variants of HIF3α have been shown to be a dominant-negative regulator of the other two alpha isoforms and has a limited expression pattern in the eye and the cerebellum. Some HIF3α isoforms are also thought to be direct transcriptional targets of HIF1α activity under hypoxia. Current studies are still unclear as to the primary function and regulatory mechanism through which HIF3α and its variants function (Makino et al, 2001; Maynard et al, 2003).

Certain disease states allow for the stabilisation of the HIFα subunit even in the presence of oxygen. One of the more well-known conditions is renal cell carcinoma (RCC). In RCC, there is a biallelic inactivation of the E3 ubiquitin ligase responsible for targeting the HIFα subunits for degradation. Renal cell carcinoma patient specimens have higher activity of HIF regulated pathways such as increased angiogenesis, altered glucose uptake and metabolism, and loss of growth control by mitogenic signals. HIF1α and HIF2α have unequal roles in RCC and HIF2α is more important for disease progression. Inhibition of HIF2α suppresses in vivo tumour growth (Kondo et al, 2003). This suggests that in a system where both HIF1α and HIF2α are stabilized and functional, HIF2α is critical to tumour growth and survival whereas HIF1α is not. HIF2α is stabilized at a wider range of oxygen tensions, ranging from severe hypoxia (<1% oxygen) to more physiologically relevant tension for tumours (2–5% oxygen) (Holmquist-Mengelbier et al, 2006). HIF2α can respond to a wider range of oxygen tensions to activate downstream transcriptional targets. The tumour would have the capability to adapt to an ever-changing microenvironment beyond the regions of most severe hypoxia. However, HIF1α also has a role in addition to HIF2α in promoting tumour growth. In solid tumours HIF1α has been linked to regulating oncogene activity through AKT and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathways. The different roles and expression patterns of HIF1α and HIF2α demonstrate that their specificity is important for tumour propagation and survival. The HIFs have been demonstrated to be expressed in the cancer stem cell population, possibly promoting the stem-like phenotype and driving tumour growth.

The role of HIFs in cancer stem cells

Although originally described in endothelial cells as regulators of migration and erythropoiesis, the HIF proteins have since been implicated in many cell processes. Specifically in cancer, they are critical for the ingrowth of vasculature to feed the rapidly expanding neoplastic compartment. As more is understood about the methods of tumour propagation, hypoxia has become a critical microenvironmental influence. Lending support to this theory is the recent evidence linking HIF expression in cancer stem cells to cell proliferation and tumour survival.

Early work on HIFs and cancer focused on HIF1α and demonstrated that the majority of tumour cells responded to hypoxia by stabilizing the HIF1α protein. In many cases HIF2α expression was not found or was no different between hypoxia and normoxia. The conclusion was drawn that HIF1α, not HIF2α, was responsible for the majority of the hypoxia response in cancer. However, recent experimental evidence from our laboratory has demonstrated differential protein and mRNA expression of HIF1α and HIF2α between the non-stem and cancer stem cell (Li et al, 2009). Further, this study elucidated that HIF2α was only significantly present in the cancer stem cell population. In comparison, HIF1α was present in both stem and non-stem tumour cell population and was only stabilized in more severe hypoxic conditions. This finding suggests differential roles of the two isoforms in cancer stem cells. Furthermore, several genes previously associated with the hypoxic response in normal cells were shown to have higher expression in the cancer stem cell sub-population, such as Glut1, Serpin B9, and VEGF (Bao et al, 2006b; Li et al, 2009). Following in vivo knockdown experiments, this study concluded that HIFs were required for cancer stem cell survival and tumour propagation. Cancer stem cells that had diminished HIF activity were unable to form tumours and had reduced survival in vitro. This suggests that HIFs has a much larger role in cancer stem cells than initially hypothesised. Current studies are demonstrating an increased importance of the HIF proteins in maintaining an undifferentiated phenotype (Jogi et al, 2002).

HIFs promote a stem cell phenotype

Several reports have shown that hypoxia and HIFs are involved in maintaining a more stem-like state in normal tissue (Clarke and van der Kooy, 2009; Moreno-Manzano et al, 2009). Through signalling pathways like Notch and Oct4, the HIFs are being understood as crucial regulators of the stem cell phenotype (Gustafsson et al, 2005). Recent reports have demonstrated the ability of the hypoxic microenvironment to greatly potentiate the biological effect of Notch in adenocarcinoma of the lung (Chen et al, 2007). In tissues throughout the body, stem cells persist in specific anatomical locations, also referred to as niches. One example of these niches can be found in bone marrow where haematopoietic stem cell are known to reside in regions regulated by oxygen tension (Parmar et al, 2007). Growing evidence supports the hypothesis that stem cells residing in hypoxic niches rely on HIF activity to maintain their undifferentiated phenotype. It is interesting to note that the presence of hypoxic areas within a tumour also suggest possible niches for cancer stem cells (Gilbertson and Rich, 2007). The correlation of tumour hypoxia to poor patient outcome may be related to an increase in the presence of cancer stem cells. In the emerging field of induced pluripotency, a recent study by Yamanaka and colleagues (Yoshida et al, 2009) has shown that culture in hypoxia significantly improves the generation of iPS colonies following reprogramming. Current understanding of cancer stem cell biology and their similarities to somatic stem cells suggest that hypoxia and the HIFs may act to regulate the cancer stem cell phenotype.

Increasing experimental evidence suggests that hypoxia and the HIFs regulate the sub-population of cancer stem cells. A recent study demonstrated that culture in hypoxia and activation of HIF1α expands the sub-population of cells positive for cancer stem cell marker, CD133 (Soeda et al, 2009). Cells under hypoxia also increased other markers associated with a more stem-like phenotype, such as CD44. At the same time, markers of neuron lineages (β3 Tubulin and GFAP) decreased in these cells. A study from Pahlman and colleagues (Jogi et al, 2002) has also shown that hypoxia in neuroblastoma cells can alter gene expression to that of a more immature phenotype. These data suggest that the fraction of a tumour considered to be cancer stem cells is plastic depending upon microenvironmental signals such as hypoxia. It is further hypothesised that the cancer stem cell phenotype may be a cell state induced in cancer cells depending on external and internal signals (Figure 2). The plasticity of the cancer stem cell state could have far reaching implications in how treatment of solid tumours is approached. Several groups have recently published data demonstrating this critical, and previously unknown, role of hypoxia in maintaining the stem-like fraction of cancer cells (Jogi et al, 2002; Heddleston et al, 2009; McCord et al, 2009).

Figure 2
figure 2

Hypoxia and the hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs) can promote the stem-like phenotype. Recent experimental evidence has demonstrated that HIFs have crucial roles in cancer. Following culture in low-oxygen conditions, the phenotype non-stem cancer cells were pushed to a more stem-like state. Several important characteristics of the cancer stem cell population, such as enhanced growth, self renewal (evidenced by spheroid formation), and tumourigenesis, have been shown to increase in the non-stem fraction of cancer cells following hypoxic culture (Heddleston et al, 2009). Non-stem cells increase their rate of proliferation above what is normally seen at 20% oxygen. This can be visualised by EdU retention (an analogue of BrDU). Hypoxia has also been shown to promote self-renewal, which can be measured by spheroid growth starting from a single cell. Non-stem cancer cells expressing constitutively active HIF2α protein have been demonstrated to have increased tumourigenicity in mice animal models.

McCord et al (2009) showed that hypoxia not only increased the fraction of CD133-positive cells, but also enhanced the stem-like phenotype of cell lines. By evaluating in vitro measures of the cancer stem cell phenotype, such as tumoursphere formation and stem cell marker expression, they showed that the stem-like population was enhanced. Using microarray techniques, they also determined that other genes related to stem cell functions, Sox2 and Oct4, were also increased in cells under hypoxia. It is interesting to note that these data showed genetic changes occurring at 7% oxygen where only HIF2α is known to be stabilized. This suggests a specific role of HIF2α in the plasticity of phenotype in cancer cells. Pahlman and colleagues (Pietras et al, 2008) demonstrated that expression of HIF2α, specifically, denotes neuroblastoma and breast cancer cells with a more immature phenotype and the presence of HIF2α-positive cells correlates to poor patient outcome. Data from the National Cancer Institute's REMBRANDT database supports the findings of McCord and Pahlman, in which patients with higher expression of HIF2α mRNA had lower survival probability (REMBRANDT Database of the National Cancer Institute, accessed 2 September 2009). Recently, it has been demonstrated that hypoxia is responsible for altering cellular phenotype by increasing proliferation, self-renewal, and the upregulation of stem genes in both stem and non-stem cancer cell populations (Figure 2A). Specifically, the HIF2α component of the hypoxic response can increase the expression of stem cell-associated genes and confer tumourigenic potential to non-stem cells (Heddleston et al, 2009). HIF2α transcriptionally regulates Oct4 (Covello et al, 2006). In addition, Oct4 and Nanog are part of the unique genetic signature of cancer cells (Ben-Porath et al, 2008; Ji et al, 2009). Together these studies outline a more sophisticated function of HIF2α outside of the canonical hypoxic responses. By regulating pathways associated with normal stem cell pluripotency, HIF2α may alter basic genetic activity of cancer cells to a more stem-like phenotype depending on the constantly fluctuating state of oxygen in the tumour. These findings are significant in showing that not only is HIF2α a critical part of the hypoxic response in cancer stem cells, but that it can promote a more stem-like phenotype in stem and non-stem cancer cells.

Discussion

Tumour cell heterogeneity is currently modelled in two paradigms: stochastic and hierarchical models. The stochastic model posits that most cells within a tumour possess the ability to self-renew to maintain phenotypic copies of themselves. In addition, many phenotypically distinct cell populations in the tumour are able to recapitulate the primary tumour in a secondary location. The hierarchical model suggests that cells within a tumour are organised in a hierarchy, similar to normal stem cells. At the top of the hierarchy are cancer stem cells, which are the only cells that are able to self-renew and propagate the tumour. The other cells in the hierarchy are phenotypically distinct from the cancer stem cell and do not possess stem-like characteristics. However, these present models do not completely fit what is known about cancer stem cell biology, especially with the recent demonstration of HIF2α promoting a more stem-like phenotype in cancer cells. In order to better understand tumour biology, new approaches to how cancer cells form the tumour are needed.

The cells that comprise a tumour can instead be modelled as accumulation of mutations or alterations in epigenetic regulation (Figure 3). In the first proposed model, as cancer cells grow and divide they acquire new mutations, which give them distinct growth and survival advantages over previous generations. This can be observed in secondary tumours. Tumours that recur following treatment and resection (secondary tumousrs) are typically more resistant to further treatment and have a more aggressive phenotype. The increase in aggressive phenotype could be because of the cancer cells that acquired enough genetic mutation to survive treatments. However, the other aspect to this model is the genetic changes that occur are irreversible and do not allow for phenotype plasticity in the cancer cell population. A different way tumour biology could be modelled is by alterations in epigenetic regulation. Cells considered to be ‘cancer stem cells’ may have a less restricted epigenetic structure, such as loss of Histone 3 methylation, and not contain any new genetic mutations compared with the rest of the tumour. The lower genetic restriction allows the cell access to a wider variety of genetic transcripts and survive injury that may be sustained following patient treatment. As cells become more repressed by epigenetic silencing (DNA and histone methylation), they can become more differentiated and exhibit less stem-like behaviours. It is important to note that this model of tumour biology does not exclude the possibility of plasticity in the cellular phenotype. Recent experimental evidence supports the theory that ‘stemness’ may be regulated by the microenvironment. Several groups have shown that hypoxia can regulate the activity of histone demethylases (Xia et al, 2009). Differential histone methylation is known to be characteristic of embryonic stem cells and this suggests that hypoxia may effect the cancer cell phenotype by altering the epigenetic structure (Pan et al, 2007). The implications of this unique role of hypoxia in cancer emphasise the gathering evidence that hypoxia is an under-studied and under-appreciated factor in regulating cell fate.

Figure 3
figure 3

A new paradigm in modelling tumour biology. Classically cancer cell biology has been modelled in a stochastic or hierarchical sense. These models focus on which cells within a tumour population are responsible for tumourigenicity, but treat cellular progression an irreversible process: either all (or a large majority) can form tumours even as the cell phenotype may change, or that only the parental cells of the hierarchy (cancer stem cells) can form tumours, whereas their differentiated progeny act as a support structure. A new way to view the cellular organisation of tumour is to focus on how a cell may acquire the ability to be tumourigenic, rather than what definitive cell population forms the tumour. The mutation model posits that the ability to form tumours is because of an accumulation of specific mutations that allow the cells to evade therapy and growth more rapidly. In this model, each mutation is irreversible and the accumulation of important mutations (e.g. p53, EGFR) allows for a sustained sub-population of cancer stem cells. The second model describes the cellular structure of the tumour to be more plastic and allow for cellular adaptation to the microenvironment. The cancer stem cell sub-population drives tumour growth, but this population arises from adaptation of the cells to their microenvironment. External influences, such as hypoxia, can drive a reversible phenotype that can enhance stem-like properties of cells to ensure survival of the tumour.