- Hypoxia-inducible factor-1ฮฑ promotes cell survival during ammonia stress response in ovarian cancer stem-like cells.
Hypoxia-inducible factor-1ฮฑ promotes cell survival during ammonia stress response in ovarian cancer stem-like cells.
Ammonia is a toxic by-product of metabolism that causes cellular stresses. Although a number of proteins are involved in adaptive stress response, specific factors that counteract ammonia-induced cellular stress and regulate cell metabolism to survive against its toxicity have yet to be identified. We demonstrated that the hypoxia-inducible factor-1ฮฑ (HIF-1ฮฑ) is stabilized and activated by ammonia stress. HIF-1ฮฑ activated by ammonium chloride compromises ammonia-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, we identified glutamine synthetase (GS) as a key driver of cancer cell proliferation under ammonia stress and glutamine-dependent metabolism in ovarian cancer stem-like cells expressing CD90. Interestingly, activated HIF-1ฮฑ counteracts glutamine synthetase function in glutamine metabolism by facilitating glycolysis and elevating glucose dependency. Our studies reveal the hitherto unknown functions of HIF-1ฮฑ in a biphasic ammonia stress management in the cancer stem-like cells where GS facilitates cell proliferation and HIF-1ฮฑ contributes to the metabolic remodeling in energy fuel usage resulting in attenuated proliferation but conversely promoting cell survival.