| Literature DB >> 27774465 |
Daniela Mennerich1, Elitsa Y Dimova1, Thomas Kietzmann1.
Abstract
Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), consisting of α- and β-subunits, are critical regulators of the transcriptional response to hypoxia under both physiological and pathological conditions. To a large extent, the protein stability and the recruitment of coactivators to the C-terminal transactivation domain of the HIF α-subunits determine overall HIF activity. The regulation of HIF α-subunit protein stability and coactivator recruitment is mainly achieved by oxygen-dependent posttranslational hydroxylation of conserved proline and asparagine residues, respectively. Under hypoxia, the hydroxylation events are inhibited and HIF α-subunits stabilize, translocate to the nucleus, dimerize with the β-subunits, and trigger a transcriptional response. However, under normal oxygen conditions, HIF α-subunits can be activated by various growth and coagulation factors, hormones, cytokines, or stress factors implicating the involvement of different kinase pathways in their regulation, thereby making HIF-α-regulating kinases attractive therapeutic targets. From the kinases known to regulate HIF α-subunits, only a few phosphorylate HIF-α directly. Here, we review the direct phosphorylation of HIF-α with an emphasis on the role of glycogen synthase kinase-3β and the consequences for HIF-1α function.Entities:
Keywords: GSK-3β; HIF-1; hypoxia; kinase; phosphorylation; tumor suppressor; ubiquitinylation
Year: 2014 PMID: 27774465 PMCID: PMC5045055 DOI: 10.2147/HP.S60703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypoxia (Auckl) ISSN: 2324-1128
Figure 1Phosphorylation- and hydroxylation-mediated proteasomal degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α).
Notes: HIF-1α is phosphorylated on specific residues (T498, S502, S505, T506, and S510 or S551, T555, and S589) by glycogen synthase kinase 3β, leading to interaction with Fbw7 that serves as the recognition component of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex also containing Skp1, Cul1, and Rbx1 and results in degradation of HIF-1α via the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. This degradation pathway is blocked by the ubiquitin-specific protease 28 (USP28). In contrast, HIF-1α is hydroxylated on specific residues (P402 and P564) by a family of prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs), leading to interaction with the VHL ubiquitin ligase complex, containing VHL, elongin C, elongin B, Cul2, and Rbx1, and results also in the proteasomal degradation of HIF-1α. In this case, the HIF-1α degradation could be blocked by the ubiquitin-specific protease 20 (USP20).
Abbreviations: bHLH, basic helix-loop-helix; PAS A, Per-ARNT-Sim A domain; PAS B, Per-ARNT-Sim B domain; ODD, oxygen-dependent degradation domain; N-TAD, N-terminal transactivation domain; ID, inhibitory domain; C-TAD, C-terminal transactivation domain; Fbw7, F-box and WD-40 protein 7; VHL, von Hippel-Lindau protein; Cul1, Cullin 1; Cul2, Cullin 2; Skp1, S phase kinase associated protein 1; Rbx1, Ring box 1; E2, E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme; Ub – ubiquitin.
HIF-α as a direct phosphorylation target
| Signal | Kinase | Mapped phosphorylated domain or exact amino acids residue or residues | System | Consequences for HIF-1 function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | ERK1/2 | Not mapped | HeLa and in vitro translated HIF-1α; CCL39 cells stably expressing the Raf-1:ER chimera | Promotes HIF-1-mediated transcriptional activation | |
| Hypoxia | ERK1 | Within the TAD-C of HIF-1α | HMEC-1 and COS-7 cells; in vitro kinase assays with overexpressed and immunoprecipitated HIF-1α and ERK1 | Induces HIF-1α transcriptional activity during hypoxia but not the stabilization of the protein | |
| Kaposi’s sarcoma-herpes virus | MAPK (PD98059), p38α, and p38γ | Within the inhibitory domain of HIF-1α | COS-7 cells; in vitro kinase assays with HIF-1α recombinant protein and overexpressed and immunoprecipitated kinases | Activates the transactivity of HIF-1α | |
| N/A | GSK-3β | Within the oxygen-dependent degradation domain | COS-7 cells; in vitro kinase assays with HIF-1α recombinant protein and overexpressed and immunoprecipitated kinase | Impairs HIF-1α protein stability | |
| Hypoxia | MEK-1/p42/p44 | 522–649 and 650–822 amino acids of the TAD-C of HIF-1α | Hep3B cells; in vitro transactivation and kinase assays with HIF-1α recombinant protein | Induces hypoxia-induced HIF-1α transactivation | |
| N/A | Not identified | Thr-796 in HIF-1α and Thr-844 in endothelial Per-arylhydrocarbon receptor-nuclear translocator-Sim domain protein 1 | HEK293 and HeLa cells; phosphorylation-of overexpressed HIF-1α protein | Necessary for the interaction with CBP/p300 | |
| Ischemia (hypoxia and low glucose) | p38α, p38β, p38δ, and p38γ | Not mapped | MiaPaCa-2 cells; in vitro kinase assays with in vitro translated HIF-1α and overexpressed, immunoprecipitated kinases | Prevents the interaction between VHL and HIF-1α | |
| N/A | ERK2 | Ser-641/Ser-643 | HIF-1α recombinant protein and HeLa extracts; mass spectroscopy analysis | Enhances the nuclear accumulation and activity of HIF-1α by blocking its CRM1-mediated nuclear export | |
| Intermittent hypoxia | Protein kinase A | Not mapped | EAhy926 endothelial cells, HMEC-1 cells; inhibitory studies | Influences the HIF-1α transcriptional activity | |
| N/A | GSK-3β | Ser-551, Thr-555 and Ser-589 | HepG2 cells; in vitro kinase assays with recombinant HIF-1α and GSK-3β | HIF-1α degradation in a VHL-independent manner | |
| N/A | ERK1/2 | CRM1-dependent phosphorylation sensitive NES in HIF-1a amino acids 616–658 | HIF-1α recombinant protein and HeLa extracts | Nuclear localization | |
| N/A | CK1δ | Ser-247 | HeLa and Huh7 cells; HIF-1α recombinant protein and HeLa extracts | Inhibits HIF-1α heterodimerization with arylhydrocarbon receptor-nuclear translocator | |
| Hypoxia | Polo-like kinase 3 | Ser-576/Ser-657 | Wild-type and | HIF-1α destabilization | |
| Hypoxia | Ataxia telangiectasia mutated kinase | Ser-696 | NBS1-1LB cells, in vitro kinase assay using overexpressed and immunoprecipitated kinase and recombinant HIF-1α, followed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis | Necessary for HIF-1α stabilization | |
| N/A | GSK-3β | Thr-498, Ser-502, Ser-505, Thr-506, and Ser-510 | SK-OV3 human ovarian cancer cells; in vitro kinase assays using purified GSK-3β and overexpressed and immunoprecipitated HIF-1α | HIF-1α degradation in a VHL-independent manner under hypoxia | |
| N/A | CDK1 | Ser-668 | HCT116 cells; in vivo interaction; in vitro kinase assays with peptides from HIF-1α and purified CDK1 | HIF-1α stabilization under normoxia via inhibition of the HIF-1α proteasomal degradation |
Abbreviations: HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor; TAD-C, C-terminal transactivation domain; GSK-3β, glycogen synthase kinase 3β; CCL39, Chinese hamster fibroblast cell line; COS-7, African green monkey kidney fibroblast-like cell line; Hep3B, human liver hepatocellular cell line, containing hepatitis B; HepG2, human liver hepatocellular cell line; HMEC, human mammary epithelial cell; MEFs, mouse embryonic fibroblasts; NBSI-ILB, SV40-transformed Nijmegen Breakage syndrome fibroblasts; SK-OV3, human ovarian cancer cells; HeLa, human epithelial cervix adenocarcinoma cell line; HEK293, human embryonic kidney cell line; MiaPaCa-2, human epithelial pancreas carcinoma cell line; Huh7, human hepatocarcinoma cell line; HCT116, human colorectal carcinoma cell line; CRMI, exportin 1; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase family; CDKI, cyclin-dependent kinase 1; CKIδ, casein kinase 1δ.