The transition from HIF-1 to HIF-2 during prolonged hypoxia results from reactivation of PHDs and HIF1A mRNA instability

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作者
Maciej Jaśkiewicz
Adrianna Moszyńska
Jarosław Króliczewski
Aleksandra Cabaj
Sylwia Bartoszewska
Agata Charzyńska
Magda Gebert
Michał Dąbrowski
James F. Collawn
Rafal Bartoszewski
机构
[1] Medical University of Gdansk,International Research Agenda 3P
[2] Medical University of Gdansk, Medicine Laboratory
[3] Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology of the Polish Academy of Sciences,Department of Biology and Pharmaceutical Botany
[4] Medical University of Gdansk,Laboratory of Bioinformatics
[5] University of Alabama at Birmingham,Department of Inorganic Chemistry
[6] University of Wroclaw,Department of Cell, Developmental, and Integrative Biology
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Hypoxia; Human endothelial cells; HIF-1α; HIF-2α;
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摘要
The hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF) are transcription factors that activate the adaptive hypoxic response when oxygen levels are low. The HIF transcriptional program increases oxygen delivery by inducing angiogenesis and by promoting metabolic reprograming that favors glycolysis. The two major HIFs, HIF-1 and HIF-2, mediate this response during prolonged hypoxia in an overlapping and sequential fashion that is referred to as the HIF switch. Both HIF proteins consist of an unstable alpha chain and a stable beta chain. The instability of the alpha chains is mediated by prolyl hydroxylase (PHD) activity during normoxic conditions, which leads to ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of the alpha chains. During normoxic conditions, very little HIF-1 or HIF-2 alpha–beta dimers are present because of PHD activity. During hypoxia, however, PHD activity is suppressed, and HIF dimers are stable. Here we demonstrate that HIF-1 expression is maximal after 4 h of hypoxia in primary endothelial cells and then is dramatically reduced by 8 h. In contrast, HIF-2 is maximal at 8 h and remains elevated up to 24 h. There are differences in the HIF-1 and HIF-2 transcriptional profiles, and therefore understanding how the transition between them occurs is important and not clearly understood. Here we demonstrate that the HIF-1 to HIF-2 transition during prolonged hypoxia is mediated by two mechanisms: (1) the HIF-1 driven increase in the glycolytic pathways that reactivates PHD activity and (2) the much less stable mRNA levels of HIF-1α (HIF1A) compared to HIF-2α (EPAS1) mRNA. We also demonstrate that the alpha mRNA levels directly correlate to the relative alpha protein levels, and therefore to the more stable HIF-2 expression during prolonged hypoxia.
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