HIF-1α-pro564羟基化修饰与其他蛋白的互作研究
PHD2 羟基化酶的催化机制与氧感应结构基础
该组研究聚焦于脯氨酰羟基化酶(尤其是PHD2/EGLN1)作为氧气传感器的分子机制。涵盖了酶的纯化、活性分析、锌指结构对底物识别的作用,以及在红细胞增多症和高原适应中发现的PHD2突变如何影响其对HIF-1α Pro-564等位点的催化功能。
- An Erythrocytosis-Associated Mutation in the Zinc Finger of PHD2 Provides Insights into Its Binding of p23(Daisheng Song, W. Guan, Lea M. Coon, A. Al-Kali, Jennifer L. Oliveira, F. Lee, 2019, Hypoxia)
- Hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl-hydroxylase: purification and assays of PHD2.(K. Hewitson, C. Schofield, P. Ratcliffe, 2007, Methods in enzymology)
- Hypoxia Up-regulates Prolyl Hydroxylase Activity(G. D’angelo, E. Duplan, N. Boyer, P. Vigne, C. Frelin, 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Enzyme substrate recognition in oxygen sensing: how the HIF trap snaps.(E. Metzen, 2007, The Biochemical journal)
- Erythrocytosis-inducing PHD2 mutations implicate biological role for N-terminal prolyl-hydroxylation in HIF1α oxygen-dependent degradation domain(Cassandra C. Taber, Wenguang He, G. Gasmi-Seabrook, Mia Hubert, Fraser G. Ferens, M. Ikura, Jeffery E. Lee, M. Ohh, 2025, eLife)
- Defective Tibetan PHD2 Binding to p23 Links High Altitude Adaption to Altered Oxygen Sensing*(Daisheng Song, Lin-sheng Li, P. Arsenault, Qiulin Tan, A. Bigham, Katherine J. Heaton-Johnson, S. Master, F. Lee, 2014, The Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Studies on the activity of the hypoxia-inducible-factor hydroxylases using an oxygen consumption assay.(Dominic Ehrismann, E. Flashman, David N Genn, N. Mathioudakis, K. Hewitson, P. Ratcliffe, C. Schofield, 2007, The Biochemical journal)
- Regulation of the HIF pathway: enzymatic hydroxylation of a conserved prolyl residue in hypoxia-inducible factor alpha subunits governs capture by the pVHL E3 ubiquitin ligase complex.(D. Mole, C. Pugh, P. Ratcliffe, P. Maxwell, 2002, Advances in enzyme regulation)
- Structural basis for oxygen degradation domain selectivity of the HIF prolyl hydroxylases(R. Chowdhury, Ivanhoe K. H. Leung, Ya-min Tian, Martine I. Abboud, Wei Ge, C. Domene, F. Cantrelle, I. Landrieu, Adam P. Hardy, C. Pugh, P. Ratcliffe, T. Claridge, C. Schofield, 2016, Nature Communications)
- Oxygen sensing by the prolyl-4-hydroxylase PHD2 within the nuclear compartment and the influence of compartmentalisation on HIF-1 signalling(F. K. Pientka, Jun Hu, Susann G. Schindler, Britta Brix, Anika Thiel, O. Jöhren, J. Fandrey, U. Berchner‐Pfannschmidt, R. Depping, 2012, Journal of Cell Science)
- HIF prolyl‐hydroxylase 2 is the key oxygen sensor setting low steady‐state levels of HIF‐1α in normoxia(E. Berra, E. Benizri, A. Ginouvès, Véronique Volmat, D. Roux, J. Pouysségur, 2003, The EMBO Journal)
- The Zinc Finger of Prolyl Hydroxylase Domain Protein 2 Is Essential for Efficient Hydroxylation of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor α(P. Arsenault, Daisheng Song, Y. Chung, T. Khurana, F. Lee, 2016, Molecular and Cellular Biology)
- [Inhibition of the in vitro interaction between hypoxia inducible factor 1alpha and p300 by mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase 1].(Chang-jiang Liu, Yong-Quan Shi, Yu-lei Du, Yanglin Pan, Jie Liang, Shuang-yin Han, D. Fan, 2005, Zhonghua yi xue za zhi)
- Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) promotes its degradation by induction of HIF-alpha-prolyl-4-hydroxylases.(Jan H. Marxsen, Petra Stengel, K. Doege, P. Heikkinen, T. Jokilehto, Thomas Wagner, W. Jelkmann, P. Jaakkola, E. Metzen, 2004, The Biochemical journal)
VHL E3 泛素连接酶对羟基化 HIF-α 的识别与降解机制
这部分文献阐明了HIF-1α在关键脯氨酸位点(Pro-564/402)羟基化后,如何被VHL蛋白特异性识别。研究涉及VHL/ODD结合的结构生物学基础、结合序列基序(如Leu-574)、不同羟基化位点的独立降解功能,以及VHL介导的泛素化全过程。
- Regulation of HIF by the von Hippel‐Lindau Tumour Suppressor: Implications for Cellular Oxygen Sensing(D. Mole, P. Maxwell, C. Pugh, P. Ratcliffe, 2001, IUBMB Life)
- HIF-1alpha and EPAS ubiquitination mediated by the VHL tumour suppressor involves flexibility in the ubiquitination mechanism, similar to other RING E3 ligases.(S. Paltoglou, B. J. Roberts, 2007, Oncogene)
- HIF-1alpha binding to VHL is regulated by stimulus-sensitive proline hydroxylation.(F. Yu, S. White, Q. Zhao, F. Lee, 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America)
- Two sequence motifs from HIF-1α bind to the DNA-binding site of p53(L. Hansson, A. Friedler, S. Freund, S. Rüdiger, A. Fersht, 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America)
- Targeting of HIF-α to the von Hippel-Lindau Ubiquitylation Complex by O2-Regulated Prolyl Hydroxylation(P. Jaakkola, D. Mole, Ya-min Tian, Michael I. Wilson, J. Gielbert, S. Gaskell, A. Kriegsheim, H. Hebestreit, Mridul Mukherji, C. Schofield, P. Maxwell, C. Pugh, P. Ratcliffe, 2001, Science)
- Leu-574 of HIF-1α Is Essential for the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)-mediated Degradation Pathway*(L. Huang, Erin A Pete, M. Schau, Justine Milligan, J. Gu, 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Quantifying the Binding Interaction between the Hypoxia-Inducible Transcription Factor and the von Hippel-Lindau Suppressor.(C. Domene, Christian Jorgensen, K. Vanommeslaeghe, C. Schofield, Alexander D. MacKerell, 2015, Journal of chemical theory and computation)
- Multiple Splice Variants of the Human HIF-3α Locus Are Targets of the von Hippel-Lindau E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Complex*(M. Maynard, Heng Qi, Jacky K. H. Chung, Eric Lee, Y. Kondo, S. Hara, R. Conaway, J. Conaway, M. Ohh, 2003, The Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- HIF hydroxylation and cellular oxygen sensing(E. Metzen, P. Ratcliffe, 2004, No journal)
- The Vhl E3 ubiquitin ligase complex regulates melanisation via sima, cnc and the copper import protein Ctr1A.(Bichao Zhang, Lauren A. Kirn, R. Burke, 2021, Biochimica et biophysica acta. Molecular cell research)
- Coordinate Regulation of the Oxygen-Dependent Degradation Domains of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1α(D. Chan, P. Sutphin, S. Yen, A. Giaccia, 2005, Molecular and Cellular Biology)
- Structural basis for binding of hypoxia-inducible factor to the oxygen-sensing prolyl hydroxylases.(R. Chowdhury, M. McDonough, J. Mecinović, Christoph Loenarz, E. Flashman, K. Hewitson, C. Domene, C. Schofield, 2009, Structure)
- HIF-1α hydroxyprolines modulate oxygen-dependent protein stability via single VHL interface with comparable effect on ubiquitination rate.(Wenguang He, Sarah Batty-Stuart, Jeffrey E. Lee, M. Ohh, 2021, Journal of molecular biology)
- Differential responses of two degradation domains of HIF-1alpha to hypoxia and iron deficiency.(Kyoung-Hwa Lee, E. Choi, Y. Chun, Myung-suk Kim, Jong-Wan Park, 2006, Biochimie)
- Independent function of two destruction domains in hypoxia‐inducible factor‐α chains activated by prolyl hydroxylation(N. Masson, C. Willam, P. Maxwell, C. Pugh, P. Ratcliffe, 2001, The EMBO Journal)
- Proline hydroxylation at different sites in hypoxia-inducible factor 1α modulates its interactions with the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor protein.(Hongsheng Qian, Yu Zou, Yiming Tang, Yehong Gong, Zhenyu Qian, Guanghong Wei, Qingwen Zhang, 2018, Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP)
- The von Hippel-Lindau protein, HIF hydroxylation, and oxygen sensing.(W. Kaelin, 2005, Biochemical and biophysical research communications)
- Mutation analysis of the HIF-1alpha oxygen-dependent degradation domain in invasive breast cancer.(M. M. Vleugel, A. Greijer, E. van der Wall, P. V. van Diest, 2005, Cancer genetics and cytogenetics)
- HIFα Targeted for VHL-Mediated Destruction by Proline Hydroxylation: Implications for O2 Sensing(M. Ivan, K. Kondo, H. Yang, W. Kim, J. Valiando, M. Ohh, A. Salic, J. Asara, William Arbuthnot Sir Lane, W. Kaelin, 2001, Science)
介导 HIF-1α 稳定性的支架蛋白与协同辅助因子
除了核心PHD/VHL轴,多项研究发现了能够增强或调节降解效率的辅助蛋白。这些蛋白(如OS-9, SSAT1/2, FKBP38, DAPK, p23等)通过作为支架稳定VHL复合物或直接与HIF-1α/PHD2互作,实现对缺氧响应路径的精细微调。
- Spermidine/spermine N(1)-acetyltransferase-1 binds to hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) and RACK1 and promotes ubiquitination and degradation of HIF-1alpha.(J. Baek, Ye V. Liu, Karin R. McDonald, Jacob B. Wesley, Huafeng Zhang, G. Semenza, 2007, The Journal of biological chemistry)
- Tumour suppressor death-associated protein kinase targets cytoplasmic HIF-1α for Th17 suppression(Ting-Fang Chou, Ya-Ting Chuang, Wan-Chen Hsieh, Pei-Yun Chang, Hsin-Yu Liu, Shu-Ting Mo, Tzu-Sheng Hsu, S. Miaw, Ruey-Hwa Chen, A. Kimchi, M. Lai, 2016, Nature Communications)
- OS-9 interacts with hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha and prolyl hydroxylases to promote oxygen-dependent degradation of HIF-1alpha.(J. Baek, P. Mahon, Jane Oh, B. Kelly, B. Krishnamachary, M. Pearson, D. Chan, A. Giaccia, G. Semenza, 2005, Molecular cell)
- Tid-1 interacts with the von Hippel-Lindau protein and modulates angiogenesis by destabilization of HIF-1alpha.(M. Bae, Joo-Won Jeong, Se-Hee Kim, Soo-Young Kim, H. Kang, Dongmin Kim, S. Bae, I. Yun, G. Trentin, M. Rozakis-Adcock, Kyu-Won Kim, 2005, Cancer research)
- Crosslinking-mediated Interactome Analysis Identified PHD2-HIF1α Interaction Hotspots and the Role of PHD2 in Regulating Protein Neddylation(Haiping Ouyang, Cindy Y. How, Xiaorong Wang, Clinton Yu, Ang Luo, Lan Huang, Yue Chen, 2024, bioRxiv)
- Microtubular Stability Affects pVHL-Mediated Regulation of HIF-1alpha via the p38/MAPK Pathway in Hypoxic Cardiomyocytes(M. Teng, Xupin Jiang, Qiong Zhang, Jiaping Zhang, Dong‐xia Zhang, Guang-ping Liang, Yuesheng Huang, 2012, PLoS ONE)
- The Peptidyl Prolyl cis/trans Isomerase FKBP38 Determines Hypoxia-Inducible Transcription Factor Prolyl-4-Hydroxylase PHD2 Protein Stability(S. Barth, J. Nesper, P. Hasgall, R. Wirthner, K. J. Nytko, F. Edlich, D. Katschinski, D. Stiehl, R. Wenger, G. Camenisch, 2007, Molecular and Cellular Biology)
- Jab1 interacts directly with HIF-1alpha and regulates its stability.(M. Bae, M. Ahn, Joo-Won Jeong, M. Bae, Y. M. Lee, S. Bae, Jong-Wan Park, Kwang-Rok Kim, Kyu-Won Kim, 2002, The Journal of biological chemistry)
- Spermidine/Spermine-N1-Acetyltransferase 2 Is an Essential Component of the Ubiquitin Ligase Complex That Regulates Hypoxia-inducible Factor 1α*(J. Baek, Ye V. Liu, Karin R. McDonald, Jacob B. Wesley, Maimon E Hubbi, Hweejo Byun, G. Semenza, 2007, Journal of Biological Chemistry)
转录因子交叉互作与非经典途径的稳定性调控
探讨了非降解依赖性或非经典泛素化途径对HIF-1α的调控。包括Stat3、beta-catenin、MDM2、C/EBPα等转录因子与HIF-1α的物理结合,这些互作竞争性地影响HIF的稳定性、阻止降解或改变其转录活性。
- Melanoma antigen-11 inhibits the hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase 2 and activates hypoxic response.(Olga Aprelikova, Olga Aprelikova, S. Pandolfi, S. Tackett, Mark Ferreira, K. Salnikow, Y. Ward, J. Risinger, J. Barrett, J. Niederhuber, 2009, Cancer research)
- Interaction between beta-catenin and HIF-1 promotes cellular adaptation to hypoxia.(A. Kaidi, A. Williams, C. Paraskeva, 2007, Nature cell biology)
- STAT3 inhibits the degradation of HIF-1alpha by pVHL-mediated ubiquitination.(Joo Eun Jung, H. Kim, C. Lee, Y. Shin, Yong Nyun Kim, G. Kang, T. Y. Kim, Y. Juhnn, Sung Joon Kim, Jong Wan Park, S. Ye, M. Chung, 2008, Experimental & molecular medicine)
- CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha antagonizes transcriptional activity of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha with direct protein-protein interaction.(L. Yang, Y. Jiang, S. Wu, M. Zhou, Y. Wu, G. Chen, 2008, Carcinogenesis)
- Physical and functional interaction of Runt-related protein 1 with hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha.(Z. Peng, M. Zhou, Y. Huang, J. Qiu, L. S. Wang, S. Liao, S. Dong, G. Chen, 2008, Oncogene)
- Functional role of p35srj, a novel p300/CBP binding protein, during transactivation by HIF-1.(S. Bhattacharya, Catherine L. Michels, Man-Kit Leung, Z. Arany, A. Kung, D. Livingston, 1999, Genes & development)
- Mdm2 and HIF-1alpha interaction in tumor cells during hypoxia.(A. Nieminen, S. Qanungo, Elizabeth A Schneider, B. Jiang, F. Agani, 2005, Journal of cellular physiology)
- The regulation of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor-1 (HIF-1alpha) expression by Protein Disulfide Isomerase (PDI)(Yukino Kobayashi, Ami Oguro, Y. Hirata, S. Imaoka, 2021, PLoS ONE)
环境因子、致癌因素及非编码RNA对羟基化通路的干扰
研究侧重于在病理或外部刺激下羟基化修饰如何被劫持或阻断。包括一氧化氮(NO)、去铁胺(DFO)、环孢素A等药物/分子的动态影响,以及癌基因(Src, Ras)、病毒蛋白(HPV E6/E7)和长链非编码RNA(lncRNA)对PHD2或VHL功能的干扰。
- Nitric oxide impairs normoxic degradation of HIF-1alpha by inhibition of prolyl hydroxylases.(E. Metzen, Jie Zhou, W. Jelkmann, J. Fandrey, B. Brüne, 2003, Molecular biology of the cell)
- Cancer-associated fibroblast-induced lncRNA WARS2-IT1 confers radioresistance of colorectal cancer via enhancing HIF-1α stability(Yuanqi Li, W. Dai, Xiao Zheng, Qi Wang, Jinping Zhang, Xiangyin Kong, Jingting Jiang, You Zhou, 2025, Cell Death & Disease)
- Bioinformatics Analysis Reveals E6 and E7 of HPV 16 Regulate Metabolic Reprogramming in Cervical Cancer, Head and Neck Cancer, and Colorectal Cancer through the PHD2-VHL-CUL2-ELOC-HIF-1α Axis(Adán Arizmendi-Izazaga, Napoleón Navarro-Tito, Hilda Jiménez-Wences, Adilene Evaristo-Priego, Víctor D Priego-Hernández, R. Dircio-Maldonado, A. Zacapala-Gómez, M. Mendoza-Catalán, B. Illades-Aguiar, Mónica De Nova Ocampo, E. G. Salmerón-Bárcenas, M. Leyva-Vázquez, J. Ortiz-Ortiz, 2024, Current Issues in Molecular Biology)
- Role of Prolyl Hydroxylation in Oncogenically Stabilized Hypoxia-inducible Factor-1α*(D. Chan, P. Sutphin, N. Denko, A. Giaccia, 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Extracellular vesicle-packaged HIF-1α-stabilizing lncRNA from tumour-associated macrophages regulates aerobic glycolysis of breast cancer cells(Fei Chen, Jianing Chen, Linbin Yang, Jiang Liu, Xiaoqian Zhang, Yin Zhang, Q. Tu, D. Yin, D. Lin, Ping-Pui Wong, Di Huang, Yue Xing, Jinghua Zhao, Mengfeng Li, Qiang Liu, F. Su, Shicheng Su, E. Song, 2019, Nature Cell Biology)
- Hypoxia-induced activation of HIF-1: role of HIF-1alpha-Hsp90 interaction.(E. Minet, D. Mottet, G. Michel, I. Roland, M. Raes, J. Remacle, C. Michiels, 1999, FEBS letters)
- Endothelial monocyte activating polypeptide-II modulates endothelial cell responses by degrading hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha through interaction with PSMA7, a component of the proteasome.(A. Tandle, Maura Calvani, B. Uranchimeg, D. Zahavi, G. Melillo, S. Libutti, 2009, Experimental cell research)
- Cyclosporin A Prevents the Hypoxic Adaptation by Activating Hypoxia-inducible Factor-1α Pro-564 Hydroxylation*(G. D’angelo, E. Duplan, P. Vigne, C. Frelin, 2003, The Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Contrasting effects on HIF-1alpha regulation by disease-causing pVHL mutations correlate with patterns of tumourigenesis in von Hippel-Lindau disease.(S. Clifford, M. Cockman, A. Smallwood, D. Mole, E. Woodward, P. Maxwell, P. Ratcliffe, E. Maher, 2001, Human molecular genetics)
- Dynamic, site-specific interaction of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha with the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor protein.(Fang Yu, S. White, Quan Zhao, F. Lee, 2001, Cancer research)
- Nitric oxide reverses desferrioxamine- and hypoxia-evoked HIF-1alpha accumulation--implications for prolyl hydroxylase activity and iron.(M. Callapina, Jie Zhou, S. Schnitzer, E. Metzen, C. Lohr, J. Deitmer, B. Brüne, 2005, Experimental cell research)
羟基化修饰的检测技术开发与临床预后评估
侧重于技术转化与应用。包括开发基于荧光偏振的蛋白互作分析方法、针对特定羟基化位点(Pro-564)的特异性抗体在肿瘤组织中的检测,以及这些分子标志物在评估缺氧感知通路状态中的作用。
- Analysis of the hypoxia-sensing pathway in Drosophila melanogaster.(N. Arquier, P. Vigne, E. Duplan, T. Hsu, P. Thérond, C. Frelin, G. D’angelo, 2006, The Biochemical journal)
- A fluorescence polarization-based interaction assay for hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylases.(Hyunju Cho, Hyunsung Park, E. Yang, 2005, Biochemical and biophysical research communications)
- Proline-Hydroxylated Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1α (HIF-1α) Upregulation in Human Tumours(C. Snell, H. Turley, A. McIntyre, Demin Li, M. Masiero, C. Schofield, K. Gatter, A. Harris, F. Pezzella, 2014, PLoS ONE)
- Suppression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha (HIF-1alpha) transcriptional activity by the HIF prolyl hydroxylase EGLN1.(Kenneth K. W. To, L. Huang, 2005, The Journal of biological chemistry)
合并后的分组全面勾勒了HIF-1α Pro-564羟基化修饰的生命周期及其复杂的互作网络。研究不仅深入解析了PHD2/VHL这一核心降解轴的结构与催化机制,还揭示了众多辅助蛋白、竞争性转录因子以及非编码RNA如何精细微调该过程。此外,通过整合环境因子干扰与检测技术研究,报告展现了该互作体系在肿瘤发生、高原适应及药物研发中的重要应用价值。
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Hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha), a transcription factor, plays a critical role in adaption to hypoxia, which is a major feature of diseases, including cancer. Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is up-regulated in numerous cancers and leads to cancer progression. PDI, a member of the TRX superfamily, regulates the transcriptional activities of several transcription factors. To investigate the mechanisms by which PDI affects the function of HIF-1alpha, the overexpression or knockdown of PDI was performed. The overexpression of PDI decreased HIF-1alpha expression in the human hepatocarcinoma cell line, Hep3B, whereas the knockdown of endogenous PDI increased its expression. NH4Cl inhibited the decrease in HIF-1alpha expression by PDI overexpression, suggesting that HIF-1alpha was degraded by the lysosomal pathway. HIF-1alpha is transferred to lysosomal membranes by heat shock cognate 70 kDa protein (HSC70). The knockdown of HSC70 abolished the decrease, and PDI facilitated the interaction between HIF-1alpha and HSC70. HIF-1alpha directly interacted with PDI. PDI exists not only in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), but also in the cytosol. Hypoxia increased cytosolic PDI. We also investigated changes in the redox state of HIF-1alpha using PEG-maleimide, which binds to thiols synthesized from disulfide bonds by reduction. An up-shift in the HIF-1alpha band by the overexpression of PDI was detected, suggesting that PDI formed disulfide bond in HIF-1alpha. HIF-1alpha oxidized by PDI was not degraded in HSC70-knockdown cells, indicating that the formation of disulfide bond in HIF-1alpha was important for decreases in HIF-1alpha expression. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to show the regulation of the expression and redox state of HIF-1alpha by PDI. We also demonstrated that PDI formed disulfide bonds in HIF-1alpha 1–245 aa and decreased its expression. In conclusion, the present results showed that PDI is a novel factor regulating HIF-1alpha through lysosome-dependent degradation by changes in its redox state.
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Recruitment of p300/CBP by the hypoxia-inducible factor, HIF-1, is essential for the transcriptional response to hypoxia and requires an interaction between the p300/CBP CH1 region and HIF-1alpha. A new p300-CH1 interacting protein, p35srj, has been identified and cloned. p35srj is an alternatively spliced isoform of MRG1, a human protein of unknown function. Virtually all endogenous p35srj is bound to p300/CBP in vivo, and it inhibits HIF-1 transactivation by blocking the HIF-1alpha/p300 CH1 interaction. p35srj did not affect transactivation by transcription factors that bind p300/CBP outside the CH1 region. Endogenous p35srj is up-regulated markedly by the HIF-1 activators hypoxia or deferoxamine, suggesting that it could operate in a negative-feedback loop. In keeping with this notion, a p300 CH1 mutant domain, defective in HIF-1 but not p35srj binding, enhanced endogenous HIF-1 function. In hypoxic cells, p35srj may regulate HIF-1 transactivation by controlling access of HIF-1alpha to p300/CBP, and may keep a significant portion of p300/CBP available for interaction with other transcription factors by partially sequestering and functionally compartmentalizing cellular p300/CBP.
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The mechanism by which hypoxia induces gene transcription involves the inhibition of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α prolyl hydroxylase activity, which prevents von Hippel-Lindau (vHL)-dependent targeting of HIF-1α to the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. HIF-1α is stabilized, translocates to the nucleus, interacts with hypoxia-responsive elements, and promotes the activation of target genes. This report shows that cyclosporin A (CsA) interferes with the hypoxic signaling cascade in C6 glioma cells. CsA inhibits hypoxia-dependent gene transcription in a reporter gene assay and prevents the hypoxic accumulation of HIF-1α. Addition of the 530–603 C-terminal oxygen-dependent degradation (ODD) domain of HIF-1α to the green fluorescent protein (GFP) destabilized the protein in an oxygen-dependent manner. CsA prevented the hypoxic stabilization of an ODD·GFP fusion protein. An assay for 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases was developed using a light mitochondrial kidney fraction as a source of enzyme. It uses the capacity of specific peptides to stimulate the degradation of [14C]2-oxoglutarate. CsA stimulated the enzymatic activity in the presence of a peptide that mimicked the 557–576 sequence of HIF-1α. The enzyme promoted [35S]vHL binding to glutathione S-transferase (GST)·ODD fusion protein. This association increased in the presence of CsA. CsA effects were not observed when the proline residue corresponding to Pro-564 in the HIF-1α sequence was replaced by a hydroxyproline or an alanine residue. Finally, CsA increased vHL-ODD interaction during hypoxia. We conclude that CsA destabilizes HIF-1α by promoting hydroxylation of Pro-564 in the ODD domain. Such a mechanism may prevent hypoxic adaptation during CsA-induced nephrotoxicity and contribute to the adverse effects of this drug.
Stabilization of the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) protein is essential for its role as a regulator of gene expression under low oxygen conditions. Here, employing a novel hydroxylation-specific antibody, we directly show that proline 564 of HIF-1α and proline 531 of HIF-2α are hydroxylated under normoxia. Importantly, HIF-1α Pro-564 and HIF-2α Pro-531 hydroxylation is diminished with the treatment of hypoxia, cobalt chloride, desferrioxamine, or dimethyloxalyglycine, regardless of the E3 ubiquitin ligase activity of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene. Furthermore, in VHL-deficient cells, HIF-1α Pro-564 and HIF-2α Pro-531 had detectable amounts of hydroxylation following transition to hypoxia, indicating that the post-translational modification is not reversible. The introduction of v-Src or RasV12 oncogenes resulted in the stabilization of normoxic HIF-1α and the loss of hydroxylated Pro-564, demonstrating that oncogene-induced stabilization of HIF-1α is signaled through the inhibition of prolyl hydroxylation. Conversely, a constitutively active Akt oncogene stabilized HIF-1α under normoxia independently of prolyl hydroxylation, suggesting an alternative mechanism for HIF-1α stabilization. Thus, these results indicate distinct pathways for HIF-1α stabilization by different oncogenes. More importantly, these findings link oncogenesis with normoxic HIF-1α expression through prolyl hydroxylation.
Background: Tibetans have a genetic signature in the coding region of their PHD2 gene. Results: Tibetan PHD2 variant displays markedly impaired binding to the HSP90 cochaperone p23. Conclusion: Because p23 couples PHD2 to HIF-α hydroxylation, Tibetans possess a loss of function PHD2 allele. Significance: This study uncovers a mechanism for Tibetan adaptation to high altitude. The Tibetan population has adapted to the chronic hypoxia of high altitude. Tibetans bear a genetic signature in the prolyl hydroxylase domain protein 2 (PHD2/EGLN1) gene, which encodes for the central oxygen sensor of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) pathway. Recent studies have focused attention on two nonsynonymous coding region substitutions, D4E and C127S, both of which are markedly enriched in the Tibetan population. These amino acids reside in a region of PHD2 that harbors a zinc finger, which we have previously discovered binds to a Pro-Xaa-Leu-Glu (PXLE) motif in the HSP90 cochaperone p23, thereby recruiting PHD2 to the HSP90 pathway to facilitate HIF-α hydroxylation. We herein report that the Tibetan PHD2 haplotype (D4E/C127S) strikingly diminishes the interaction of PHD2 with p23, resulting in impaired PHD2 down-regulation of the HIF pathway. The defective binding to p23 depends on both the D4E and C127S substitutions. We also identify a PXLE motif in HSP90 itself that can mediate binding to PHD2 but find that this interaction is maintained with the D4E/C127S PHD2 haplotype. We propose that the Tibetan PHD2 variant is a loss of function (hypomorphic) allele, leading to augmented HIF activation to facilitate adaptation to high altitude.
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Oxygen homeostasis is crucial for a myriad of developmental, physiological, and pathophysiological processes. Hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) plays a pivotal role in response to hypoxia by transcriptionally activating target genes involving oxygen uptake, transport, delivery, and consumption. HIF-1α activity is regulated primarily through the ubiquitin-proteasome degradation pathway, which targets the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) of HIF-1α. In particular, the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein complex, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, binds to the ODD upon hydroxylation of HIF-1α Pro-564. Here, we show that in vivo VHL interacts with the N-terminal as well as the C-terminal ODD independently, supporting the notion of functional redundancy within the ODD. Moreover, we demonstrate that Leu-574 of HIF-1α is essential for VHL binding to the C-terminal ODD. Despite the presence of Pro-564, deletion or mutation of Leu-574 resulted in a loss of VHL binding and a gain of protein stability. Furthermore, the identification of Leu-574 redefines the N-terminal activation domain of HIF-1α to be constitutively active. Taken together, this study provides new insight into the mechanisms underlying VHL-mediated HIF-1α degradation and transcriptional activation, and a molecular basis for drug targeting.
Background Loss of function mutations in the EGLN1 gene are a cause of erythrocytosis. EGLN1 encodes for prolyl hydroxylase domain protein 2 (PHD2). PHD2 hydroxylates and downregulates hypoxia-inducible factor-2α (HIF-2α), a transcription factor that regulates erythropoiesis. While the large majority of erythrocytosis-associated EGLN1 mutations occur within its catalytic domain, rare mutations reside in its zinc finger. This zinc finger binds a Pro-Xaa-Leu-Glu motif in p23, an HSP90 cochaperone that facilitates hydroxylation of HIF-α, an HSP90 client. Essentially nothing is known about the specific interactions between the PHD2 zinc finger and p23. Results Here, we characterize an erythrocytosis-associated mutation in the zinc finger, K55N, that abolishes interaction with p23. We provide evidence that the affected residue, Lys-55, interacts with Asp-152 of p23. We also present results that indicate that PHD2 Arg-32 interacts with p23 Glu-160. Conclusion These studies not only reinforce the importance of the PHD2 zinc finger in the control of erythropoiesis, but also lead to a model in which a peptide motif in p23 binds in a specific orientation to a predicted groove in the zinc finger of PHD2.
The mechanism by which hypoxia induces gene transcription is now well established. Hypoxia reduces activity of prolyl hydroxylases (PHD) that hydroxylate specific proline residues in the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α). As a consequence, HIF-1α accumulates and promotes hypoxic tolerance by activating gene transcription. This paper identifies the three forms of PHDs in rats and shows that a period of hypoxia selectively increases expression of PHD-2 mRNAs levels. We developed assays for PHD activity that used (i) the peptide-specific conversion of labeled 2-oxoglutarate into succinate and (ii) the binding of the von Hippel-Lindau protein to a glutathione S-transferase-ODD fusion protein. The two assays indicated a low enzymatic activity in normoxic and hypoxic cells and a rapid increase during reoxygenation. We also developed hydroxyproline-specific antibodies that recognized hydroxylated forms of a fusion protein (ODD-green fluorescent protein) that combined the ODD domain of HIF-1α and the green fluorescent protein. Using this antibody, we demonstrated that reoxygenation induced a rapid hydroxylation of Pro-564, which was followed by a massive degradation of the proteins. The results suggest that a hypoxic upregulation of PHD (presumably PHD-2) acts as a feedback mechanism to stop hypoxic responses in reoxygenated cells. We propose that proline hydroxylation might play a role in hypoxic preconditioning.
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The basic molecular mechanism underlying mammalian oxygen-dependent regulation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) via the von Hippel-Lindau E3 ubiquitin ligase is well established. The principal step in this critical cellular process is the hydroxylation of either or both of the two conserved proline residues P402 and P564 within the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) of HIF-1α subunit via prolyl hydroxylases, which is necessary for binding VHL. However, the significance of the two prolines has remained unclear considering that only one hydroxyproline is sufficient for the recruitment of VHL. Here, we show using biophysical analyses that both hydroxyprolines bind to the same interface on VHL with similar affinity; VHL binding affinity to HIF-1α ODD remains relatively unchanged regardless of whether the ODD contains one or two hydroxyprolines; ODD with two hydroxyprolines can accommodate two VHLs; and the rate of in vitro ubiquitination of ODD with one hydroxyproline via VHL E3 ligase is comparable to the rate observed with ODD containing two hydroxyprolines. However, the two hydroxyprolines show distinct contributions to the intracellular stability of HIF-1α ODD. These results demonstrate for the first time that the graduated HIF-1α stability profile observed over a range of oxygen tension is not attributed to the binding of or ubiquitination via VHL per se, but is likely due to the preceding events such as the efficacy of oxygen-dependent prolyl hydroxylase-mediated hydroxylation of HIF-1α.
Mutations in EGLN1, the gene encoding for hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) prolyl-4-hydroxylase 2 (PHD2), cause erythrocytosis and in rare cases the development of neuroendocrine tumors. In the presence of oxygen, PHD2 hydroxylates one or both conserved prolines in the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) of HIFα subunits, sufficiently marking HIFα for binding and ubiquitylation via the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor protein-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase and subsequent degradation by the 26S proteasome. However, prolyl-hydroxylation in the C-terminal ODD appears to be the predominant and sufficient event in triggering the oxygen-dependent destruction of HIFα, rendering the biological significance of N-terminal ODD proline unclear. Here, we examined 7 disease-associated EGLN1 mutations scattered across the catalytic core and show definitively that all PHD2 mutants have a structural and/or catalytic activity defect as measured by time-resolved nuclear magnetic resonance. Notably, we identified one of the PHD2 mutants, P317R, to retain comparably wild-type capacity to hydroxylate the predominant proline in the C-terminal ODD but had uniquely compromised ability to hydroxylate the N-terminal ODD proline. These findings support the notion that deregulation of HIF ultimately underlies PHD2-driven erythrocytosis and challenge the currently held uncertainty that the N-terminal ODD prolyl-hydroxylation event is dispensable in normal hypoxic signaling pathway.
The response to hypoxia in animals involves the expression of multiple genes regulated by the αβ-hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs). The hypoxia-sensing mechanism involves oxygen limited hydroxylation of prolyl residues in the N- and C-terminal oxygen-dependent degradation domains (NODD and CODD) of HIFα isoforms, as catalysed by prolyl hydroxylases (PHD 1–3). Prolyl hydroxylation promotes binding of HIFα to the von Hippel–Lindau protein (VHL)–elongin B/C complex, thus signalling for proteosomal degradation of HIFα. We reveal that certain PHD2 variants linked to familial erythrocytosis and cancer are highly selective for CODD or NODD. Crystalline and solution state studies coupled to kinetic and cellular analyses reveal how wild-type and variant PHDs achieve ODD selectivity via different dynamic interactions involving loop and C-terminal regions. The results inform on how HIF target gene selectivity is achieved and will be of use in developing selective PHD inhibitors. The response to hypoxia involves multiple genes regulated by the hypoxia inducible transcription factors (HIFs), whose stability is regulated by prolyl hydroxylation. Here the authors provide a molecular basis for the substrate selectivity of the HIF prolyl hydroxylases that can be altered in erythrocytosis and cancer.
The stabilisation of HIF-α is central to the transcriptional response of animals to hypoxia, regulating the expression of hundreds of genes including those involved in angiogenesis, metabolism and metastasis. HIF-α is degraded under normoxic conditions by proline hydroxylation, which allows for recognition and ubiquitination by the von-Hippel-Lindau (VHL) E3 ligase complex. The aim of our study was to investigate the posttranslational modification of HIF-1α in tumours, to assess whether there are additional mechanisms besides reduced hydroxylation leading to stability. To this end we optimised antibodies against the proline-hydroxylated forms of HIF-1α for use in formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) immunohistochemistry to assess effects in tumour cells in vivo. We found that HIF-1α proline-hydroxylated at both VHL binding sites (Pro402 and Pro564), was present in hypoxic regions of a wide range of tumours, tumour xenografts and in moderately hypoxic cells in vitro. Staining for hydroxylated HIF-1α can identify a subset of breast cancer patients with poorer prognosis and may be a better marker than total HIF-1α levels. The expression of unhydroxylated HIF-1α positively correlates with VHL in breast cancer suggesting that VHL may be rate-limiting for HIF degradation. Our conclusions are that the degradation of proline-hydroxylated HIF-1α may be rate-limited in tumours and therefore provides new insights into mechanisms of HIF upregulation. Persistence of proline-hydroxylated HIF-1α in perinecrotic areas suggests there is adequate oxygen to support prolyl hydroxylase domain (PHD) activity and proline-hydroxylated HIF-1α may be the predominant form associated with the poorer prognosis that higher levels of HIF-1α confer.
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Prolyl Hydroxylase Domain protein 2 (PHD2) targets Hypoxia Inducible Factor alpha subunits (HIFα) for oxygen-dependent proline hydroxylation that leads to subsequent ubiquitination and degradation of HIFα. In addition to HIF proteins, growing evidence suggested that PHD2 may exert its multifaceted function through hydroxylase-dependent or independent activities. Given the critical role of PHD2 in diverse biological processes, it is important to comprehensively identify potential PHD2 interacting proteins. In this study, we engineered HeLa cells that stably express HTBH-tagged PHD2 to facilitate the identification of PHD2 interactome. Using DSSO-based cross-linking mass spectrometry (XL-MS) technology and LC-MSn analysis, we mapped PHD2-HIF1α interaction hotspots and identified over 300 PHD2 interacting proteins. Furthermore, we validated the COP9 Signalosome (CSN) complex, a major deneddylase complex, as a novel PHD2 interactor. DMOG treatment promoted interaction between PHD2 and CSN complex and enhanced the deneddylase activity of the CSN complex, resulting in increased level of free Cullin and reduced target protein ubiquitination. This mechanism may serve as a negative feedback regulation of the HIF transcription pathway.
Human papillomavirus 16 (HPV 16) infection is associated with several types of cancer, such as head and neck, cervical, anal, and penile cancer. Its oncogenic potential is due to the ability of the E6 and E7 oncoproteins to promote alterations associated with cell transformation. HPV 16 E6 and E7 oncoproteins increase metabolic reprogramming, one of the hallmarks of cancer, by increasing the stability of hypoxia-induced factor 1 α (HIF-1α) and consequently increasing the expression levels of their target genes. In this report, by bioinformatic analysis, we show the possible effect of HPV 16 oncoproteins E6 and E7 on metabolic reprogramming in cancer through the E6-E7-PHD2-VHL-CUL2-ELOC-HIF-1α axis. We proposed that E6 and E7 interact with VHL, CUL2, and ELOC in forming the E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that ubiquitinates HIF-1α for degradation via the proteasome. Based on the information found in the databases, it is proposed that E6 interacts with VHL by blocking its interaction with HIF-1α. On the other hand, E7 interacts with CUL2 and ELOC, preventing their binding to VHL and RBX1, respectively. Consequently, HIF-1α is stabilized and binds with HIF-1β to form the active HIF1 complex that binds to hypoxia response elements (HREs), allowing the expression of genes related to energy metabolism. In addition, we suggest an effect of E6 and E7 at the level of PHD2, VHL, CUL2, and ELOC gene expression. Here, we propose some miRNAs targeting PHD2, VHL, CUL2, and ELOC mRNAs. The effect of E6 and E7 may be the non-hydroxylation and non-ubiquitination of HIF-1α, which may regulate metabolic processes involved in metabolic reprogramming in cancer upon stabilization, non-degradation, and translocation to the nucleus.
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The tumor microenvironment in colorectal cancer (CRC) is marked by a diverse and abundant population of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), which play a crucial role in radioresistance. Nonetheless, the mechanisms through which CAFs contribute to radioresistance remain unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that CAFR, a specific subset of CAFs derived from radioresistant CRC patients, produces higher levels of transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) compared to CAFs isolated from radiosensitive CRC patients. Through long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) profiling of tumor cells treated with CAF-conditioned medium (CAF-CM), we identify WARS2-IT1 (WARS2 intronic transcript 1), whose expression is directly stimulated by TGF-β1 signaling. This lncRNA serves as a key player in promoting radioresistance and is essential for the TGFβ1-induced radioresistance pathway. Mechanistically, WARS2-IT1 interferes with the interaction between prolyl hydroxylase domain 2 (PHD2) and hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), preventing the hydroxylation and subsequent degradation of HIF-1α. This process leads to the activation of glycolytic pathways, thereby enhancing radioresistance. Our findings underscore the potential of targeting CAF-driven WARS2-IT1 as a promising strategy to counteract tumor radioresistance in CRC.
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Death-associated protein kinase (DAPK) is a tumour suppressor. Here we show that DAPK also inhibits T helper 17 (Th17) and prevents Th17-mediated pathology in a mouse model of autoimmunity. We demonstrate that DAPK specifically downregulates hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α). In contrast to the predominant nuclear localization of HIF-1α in many cell types, HIF-1α is located in both the cytoplasm and nucleus in T cells, allowing for a cytosolic DAPK–HIF-1α interaction. DAPK also binds prolyl hydroxylase domain protein 2 (PHD2) and increases HIF-1α-PHD2 association. DAPK thereby promotes the proline hydroxylation and proteasome degradation of HIF-1α. Consequently, DAPK deficiency leads to excess HIF-1α accumulation, enhanced IL-17 expression and exacerbated experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Additional knockout of HIF-1α restores the normal differentiation of Dapk−/− Th17 cells and prevents experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis development. Our results reveal a mechanism involving DAPK-mediated degradation of cytoplasmic HIF-1α, and suggest that raising DAPK levels could be used for treatment of Th17-associated inflammatory diseases. HIF-1α is critical for Th17 differentiation. Here the authors show that DAPK (Death-Associated Protein Kinase) inhibits Th17 differentiation and immunopathology in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis by promoting HIF1-α binding to its negative regulator PHD2.
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Background Our previous research found that structural changes of the microtubule network influence glycolysis in cardiomyocytes by regulating the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α during the early stages of hypoxia. However, little is known about the underlying regulatory mechanism of the changes of HIF-1α caused by microtubule network alternation. The von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor protein (pVHL), as a ubiquitin ligase, is best understood as a negative regulator of HIF-1α. Methodology/Principal Findings In primary rat cardiomyocytes and H9c2 cardiac cells, microtubule-stabilization was achieved by pretreating with paclitaxel or transfection of microtubule-associated protein 4 (MAP4) overexpression plasmids and microtubule–depolymerization was achieved by pretreating with colchicine or transfection of MAP4 siRNA before hypoxia treatment. Recombinant adenovirus vectors for overexpressing pVHL or silencing of pVHL expression were constructed and transfected in primary rat cardiomyocytes and H9c2 cells. With different microtubule-stabilizing and -depolymerizing treaments, we demonstrated that the protein levels of HIF-1α were down-regulated through overexpression of pVHL and were up-regulated through knockdown of pVHL in hypoxic cardiomyocytes. Importantly, microtubular structure breakdown activated p38/MAPK pathway, accompanied with the upregulation of pVHL. In coincidence, we found that SB203580, a p38/MAPK inhibitor decreased pVHL while MKK6 (Glu) overexpression increased pVHL in the microtubule network altered-hypoxic cardiomyocytes and H9c2 cells. Conclusions/Significance This study suggests that pVHL plays an important role in the regulation of HIF-1α caused by the changes of microtubular structure and the p38/MAPK pathway participates in the process of pVHL change following microtubule network alteration in hypoxic cardiomyocytes.
VHL encodes a tumour suppressor, which possesses E3 ubiquitin ligase activity in complex with EloC and Cul2. In tumour cells or in response to hypoxia, VHL activity is lost, causing accumulation of the transcription factor HIF-1alpha. In this study, we demonstrated that in Drosophila, Rpn9, a regulatory component of the 26 s proteasome, participates in the Vhl-induced proteasomal degradation of sima, the Drosophila orthologue of HIF-1alpha. Knockdown of Vhl induces increased melanisation in the adult fly thorax and concurrent decrease in pigmentation in the abdomen. Both these defects are rescued by knockdown of sima and partially by knockdown of cnc, which encodes the fly orthologue of the transcription factor Nrf2, the master regulator of oxidative stress response. We further show that sima overexpression and Rpn9 knockdown both result in post-translational down-regulation of the copper uptake transporter Ctr1A in the fly eye and that Ctr1A expression exacerbates Vhl knockdown defects in the thorax and rescues these defects in the abdomen. We conclude that Vhl negatively regulates both sima and cnc and that in the absence of Vhl, these transcription factors interact to regulate Ctr1A, copper uptake and consequently melanin formation. We propose a model whereby the co-regulatory relationship between sima and cnc flips between thorax and abdomen: in the thorax, sima is favoured leading to upregulation of Ctr1A; in the abdomen, cnc dominates, resulting in the post-translational downregulation of Ctr1A.
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Functional inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor protein is the cause of familial VHL disease and sporadic kidney cancer. The VHL gene product (pVHL) is a component of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that targets the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) 1 and 2 α subunits for polyubiquitylation. This process is dependent on the hydroxylation of conserved proline residues on the α subunits of HIF-1/2 in the presence of oxygen. In our effort to identify orphan HIF-like proteins in the data base that are potential targets of the pVHL complex, we report multiple splice variants of the human HIF-3α locus as follows: hHIF-3α1, hHIF-3α2 (also referred to as hIPAS; human inhibitory PAS domain protein), hHIF-3α3, hHIF-3α4, hHIF-3α5, and hHIF-3α6. We demonstrate that the common oxygen-dependent degradation domain of hHIF-3α1–3 splice variants is targeted for ubiquitylation by the pVHL complex in vitro and in vivo. This activity is enhanced in the presence of prolyl hydroxylase and is dependent on a proline residue at position 490. Furthermore, the ubiquitin conjugation occurs on lysine residues at position 465 and 568 within the oxygen-dependent degradation domain. These results demonstrate additional targets of the pVHL complex and suggest a growing complexity in the regulation of hypoxia-inducible genes by the HIF family of transcription factors.
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Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a heterodimeric transcription factor that functions as a master regulator of oxygen homeostasis. The HIF-1α subunit is subjected to O2-dependent prolyl hydroxylation leading to ubiquitination by the von Hippel-Lindau protein (VHL)-Elongin C ubiquitin-ligase complex and degradation by the 26 S proteasome. In this study, we demonstrate that spermidine/spermine-N1-acetyltransferase (SSAT) 2 plays an essential role in this process. SSAT2 binds to HIF-1α, VHL, and Elongin C and promotes ubiquitination of hydroxylated HIF-1α by stabilizing the interaction of VHL and Elongin C. Multivalent interactions by SSAT2 provide a mechanism to ensure efficient complex formation, which is necessary for the extremely rapid ubiquitination and degradation of HIF-1α that is observed in oxygenated cells.
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合并后的分组全面勾勒了HIF-1α Pro-564羟基化修饰的生命周期及其复杂的互作网络。研究不仅深入解析了PHD2/VHL这一核心降解轴的结构与催化机制,还揭示了众多辅助蛋白、竞争性转录因子以及非编码RNA如何精细微调该过程。此外,通过整合环境因子干扰与检测技术研究,报告展现了该互作体系在肿瘤发生、高原适应及药物研发中的重要应用价值。