Production of non-triple helical collagen polypeptides under Hypoxia and the Implication for Tumor

J Biochem. 2025 Jan 4:mvae099. doi: 10.1093/jb/mvae099. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Non-triple helical collagen polypetides (NTHs) are alternative gene products lacking the typical collagen triple-helical structure. This study investigated NTH production in tumor cells and tissues. NTH α1(IV) was detected in various human tumor cell lines and extracted from human lung cancer tissues and tumors in mice. NTH production was significantly affected by serum concentration and occurred under hypoxic or hypoxia-mimetic conditions, even with sufficient ascorbic acid. This suggests NTHs are produced under physiological hypoxia, potentially contributing to tumor angiogenesis. NTH production generally coincided with hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) accumulation, except with cobalt chloride, indicating HIF-1α isn't directly involved in NTH α1(IV) production. NTH electrophoretic mobility on SDS-PAGE was higher under hypoxia or deferoxamine treatment, likely due to suppressed lysyl hydroxylase 3 activity. This study demonstrates NTH production in tumor cells and tissues under hypoxia, suggesting their association with tumor angiogenesis and potential as therapeutic targets.

Keywords: HIF-1α; angiogenesis; hypoxia; non-triple helical collagen polypeptide; tumor; type IV collagen.