Emergence of cyclic hypoxia and the impact of PARP inhibitors on tumor progression

Autor/a

Conte, M.

Fernandez, V. C.

Oliver, F. J.

Alarcón, T.

Soler, J.

Data de publicació

2024-10-22



Resum

Tumor hypoxia is a dynamic phenomenon marked by fluctuations in oxygen levels across both rapid (seconds to minutes) and slow (hours to days) time scales. While short hypoxia cycles are relatively well understood, the mechanisms behind longer cycles remain largely unclear. In this paper, we present a novel mechanistic mathematical model that explains slow hypoxia cycles through feedback loops involving vascular expansion and regression, oxygen-regulated tumor growth, and toxic cytokine production. Our study reveals that, for the emergence of slow hypoxia cycles, endothelial cells must adapt by decreasing receptor activation as ligand concentration increases. Additionally, the interaction between tumor cells and toxic cytokines influences frequency and intensity of these cycles. By examining the effects of pharmacological interventions, specifically poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors, we also demonstrate how targeting cell proliferation can help regulate oxygen levels. Our findings enhance the understanding of hypoxia regulation and suggest PARP proteins as promising therapeutic targets.

Tipus de document

Article

Versió del document

Versió acceptada

Llengua

Anglès

Paraules clau

Hypoxia; PARP inhibitors; Cancer

Pàgines

9 p.

Publicat per

Nature Research

És versió de

npj Systems Biology and Applications

Documents

Emergence of cyclic hypoxia.pdf

1.120Mb

 

Drets

(c) 2024 The Author(s)

Attribution 4.0 International

(c) 2024 The Author(s)

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