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Hypoxia Associated Factor (HAF) mediates neurofibromin ubiquitination and degradation leading to Ras-ERK pathway activation in hypoxia.

Low oxygen or hypoxia is a feature of all solid tumors, and has been associated with aggressive disease. Here, we describe a novel mechanism for the hypoxia-dependent degradation of the Ras-GTPase activating protein neurofibromin, by hypoxia-associated factor (HAF). We have previously characterized HAF as an oxygen-independent ubiquitin ligase for HIF-1α. Here, we show that HAF promotes neurofibromin ubiquitination and degradation independently of oxygen and pVHL, resulting in Ras-ERK pathway activation. Hypoxia enhanced HAF:neurofibromin binding independently of HAF-SUMOylation, whereas HAF knockdown increased neurofibromin levels primarily in hypoxia, supporting the role of HAF as a hypoxia-specific neurofibromin regulator. HAF overexpression increased p-ERK levels and promoted resistance of clear cell kidney cancer (CCRCC) cells to sorafenib and sunitinib in both normoxia and hypoxia. However, a greater-fold increase in sorafenib/sunitinib resistance was observed during hypoxia, particularly in pVHL-deficient cells. Intriguingly, HAF-mediated resistance was HIF-2α dependent in normoxia, but HIF-2α independent in hypoxia indicating two potential mechanisms of HAF-mediated resistance: a HIF-2α dependent pathway dominant in normoxia, and the direct activation of the Ras-ERK pathway through neurofibromin degradation dominant in hypoxia. CCRCC patients with high HAF transcript or protein levels showed significantly decreased overall survival compared to those with low HAF. Thus, we establish a novel, non-mutational pathway of neurofibromin inactivation through hypoxia-induced HAF-mediated degradation, leading to Ras-ERK activation and poor prognosis in CCRCC. Implications: We describe a novel mechanism of neurofibromin degradation induced by hypoxia which leads to activation of the pro-oncogenic Ras-ERK pathway and resistance to therapy.

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