| Literature DB >> 19926662 |
K G Pringle1, K L Kind, A N Sferruzzi-Perri, J G Thompson, C T Roberts.
Abstract
In the first trimester the extravillous cytotrophoblast cells occlude the uterine spiral arterioles creating a low oxygen environment early in pregnancy, which is essential for pregnancy success. Paradoxically, shallow trophoblast invasion and defective vascular remodelling of the uterine spiral arteries in the first trimester may result in impaired placental perfusion and chronic placental ischemia and hypoxia later in gestation leading to adverse pregnancy outcomes. The hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs) are key mediators of the response to low oxygen. We aimed to elucidate mechanisms of regulation of HIFs and the role these may play in the control of placental differentiation, growth and function in both normal and pathological pregnancies. The Pubmed database was consulted for identification of the most relevant published articles. Search terms used were oxygen, placenta, trophoblast, pregnancy, HIF and hypoxia. The HIFs are able to function throughout all aspects of normal and abnormal placental differentiation, growth and function; during the first trimester (physiologically low oxygen), during mid-late gestation (where there is adequate supply of blood and oxygen to the placenta) and in pathological pregnancies complicated by placental hypoxia/ischemia. During normal pregnancy HIFs may respond to complex alterations in oxygen, hormones, cytokines and growth factors to regulate placental invasion, differentiation, transport and vascularization. In the ever-changing environment created during pregnancy, the HIFs appear to act as key mediators of placental development and function and thereby are likely to be important contributors to both normal and adverse pregnancy outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19926662 PMCID: PMC2880912 DOI: 10.1093/humupd/dmp046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Reprod Update ISSN: 1355-4786 Impact factor: 15.610
Figure 1Mechanism of HIF regulation under acute and prolonged hypoxia. Under acute hypoxia, HIF-1α and HIF-2α are stabilized and can induce the transcription of their target genes. Following exposure to prolonged hypoxia, HIF-1α and HIF-2α can up-regulate the expression of the antisense transcript of HIF-1α (asHIF-1α) which, in turn, destabilizes HIF-1α mRNA thereby reducing HIF-1α protein levels and HIF-1α mediated gene transcription. Therefore under prolonged hypoxia HIF-2α mediated transcription is more abundant. HRE: hypoxia response element.
Non-hypoxic regulators of HIFs.
| Non-hypoxic stimuli | Action | Proposed mechanism | Found in placenta (Yes/No) | HIF target gene (Yes/No) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Progesterone | Increased | ? | Yes | No | |
| Estrogen | Increased | ? | Yes | No | |
| Prostaglandin E2 | Increased HIF-1α protein | ERK, AKT, C-SRC tyrosine kinase activity | Yes | No | |
| Angiotensin II | Increased HIF-1α mRNA and protein | AT1R, PKC, ROS activation | Yes | No | |
| Thrombin | Increased HIF-1α mRNA, protein and activity | AT1R, PKC, ROS activation | Yes | No | |
| Platelet derived growth factor | Increased HIF-1α protein and activity | Via ROS activation | Yes | No | |
| Transforming growth factor-β1 | Increased HIF-1α protein via inhibiting HIF-1α degradation | Decreased VHL mRNA and protein via Smad pathway | Yes | Yes | |
| Endothelin-1 | Increased HIF-1α protein | ? | Yes | Yes | |
| Epidermal Growth Factor | Increased HIF-1α protein | Via PI3K | Yes | No | |
| RhoA | Increased HIF-1α protein | ? | Yes | No | |
| Mechanical stretch | Increased HIF-1α mRNA and protein | Via p42/p44 MAPK pathway | |||
| Interleukin-1β | Increased HIF-1 protein | ERK 1/2 activation | Yes | Yes | |
| Tumor Necrosis Factor-α | Increased HIF-1 DNA binding | Activation of HIF co-activators, NFκB pathway | Yes | No | |
| Insulin | Increased | Via PI3 and MAPK pathways | Yes | No | |
| Insulin-like Growth Factor-I | Increased HIF-1α and HIF-2α protein | Via PI3 and MAPK pathways or through PHD2 | Yes | No | |
| Insulin-like Growth Factor-II | Increased HIF-1α protein, decreased | Via Mdm2 and decreased p53 | Yes | Yes |