Prolyl hydroxylase-1 negatively regulates IκB kinase-β, giving insight into hypoxia-induced NFκB activity

被引:626
作者
Cummins, Eoin P.
Berra, Edurne
Comerford, Katrina M.
Ginouves, Amandine
Fitzgerald, Kathleen T.
Seeballuck, Fergal
Godson, Catherine
Nielsen, Jens E.
Moynagh, Paul
Pouyssegur, Jacques
Taylor, Cormac T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coll Dublin, Coll Life Sci, Sch Med & Med Sci, Conway Inst Biomol & Biomed Res, Dublin 4, Ireland
[2] Univ Nice, CNRS UMR 6543, Ctr Antoine Lacassagne, Inst Signalling Dev Biol & Canc Res, F-06189 Nice, France
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
IKK;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0602235103
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Hypoxia is a feature of the microenvironment of a growing tumor. The transcription factor NF kappa B is activated in hypoxia, an event that has significant implications for tumor progression. Here, we demonstrate that hypoxia activates NFKB through a pathway involving activation of I kappa B kinase-beta (IKK beta) leading to phosphorylation-dependent degradation of I kappa B alpha and liberation of NF kappa B. Furthermore, through increasing the pool and/or activation potential of IKK beta, hypoxia amplifies cellular sensitivity to stimulation with TNF alpha. Within its activation loop, IKK beta contains an evolutionarily conserved LxxLAP consensus motif for hydroxylation by prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs). Mimicking hypoxia by treatment of cells with siRNA against PHD-1 or PHD-2 or the pan-prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor DMOG results in NF kappa B activation. Conversely, overexpression of PHD-1 decreases cytokine-stimulated NF kappa B reporter activity, further suggesting a repressive role for PHD-1 in controlling the activity of NF kappa B. Hypoxia increases both the expression and activity of IKK beta, and site-directed mutagenesis of the proline residue (P191A) of the putative IKK beta hydroxylation site results in a loss of hypoxic inducibility. Thus, we hypothesize that hypoxia releases repression of NF kappa B activity through decreased PHD-dependent hydroxylation of IKK beta, an event that may contribute to tumor development and progression through amplification of tumorigenic signaling pathways.
引用
收藏
页码:18154 / 18159
页数:6
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