| Literature DB >> 29383635 |
Marcin Serocki1, Sylwia Bartoszewska2, Anna Janaszak-Jasiecka1, Renata J Ochocka1, James F Collawn3, Rafał Bartoszewski4.
Abstract
The decline of oxygen tension in the tissues below the physiological demand leads to the hypoxic adaptive response. This physiological consequence enables cells to recover from this cellular insult. Understanding the cellular pathways that mediate recovery from hypoxia is therefore critical for developing novel therapeutic approaches for cardiovascular diseases and cancer. The master regulators of oxygen homeostasis that control angiogenesis during hypoxia are hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs). HIF-1 and HIF-2 function as transcriptional regulators and have both unique and overlapping target genes, whereas the role of HIF-3 is less clear. HIF-1 governs the acute adaptation to hypoxia, whereas HIF-2 and HIF-3 expressions begin during chronic hypoxia in human endothelium. When HIF-1 levels decline, HIF-2 and HIF-3 increase. This switch from HIF-1 to HIF-2 and HIF-3 signaling is required in order to adapt the endothelium to prolonged hypoxia. During prolonged hypoxia, the HIF-1 levels and activity are reduced, despite the lack of oxygen-dependent protein degradation. Although numerous protein factors have been proposed to modulate the HIF pathways, their application for HIF-targeted therapy is rather limited. Recently, the miRNAs that endogenously regulate gene expression via the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway have been shown to play critical roles in the hypoxia response pathways. Furthermore, these classes of RNAs provide therapeutic possibilities to selectively target HIFs and thus modulate the HIF switch. Here, we review the significance of the microRNAs on the relationship between the HIFs under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.Entities:
Keywords: HIFs; Hypoxia; Morpholinos; Target protectors; microRNAs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29383635 PMCID: PMC5878208 DOI: 10.1007/s10456-018-9600-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angiogenesis ISSN: 0969-6970 Impact factor: 9.596
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the HIF subunit domain structures. ODD oxygen-dependent degradation domain, bHLH basic helix–loop–helix, PAS PER–ARNT–SIM, TAD transactivation domain, aa number of amino acid residues
Fig. 2Hypoxia (0.8% O2) induces dynamic changes in the protein expression profile of the Hif-1α, Hif-2α and HIF-3α in primary HUVECs (pooled from 10 donors, passage 3). The protein levels of were detected with SDS-PAGE and Western blot and normalized to β Actin levels. Two individual samples (20 µg of total protein per lane) were tested for each time point, and the experiments were repeated twice. The primary antibodies used were: Hif-1α (Abcam ab16066, diluted at 1:2000); Hif-2α (Abcam ab199, diluted at 1:1000), Hif-3α [12] (Sigma AV39936, diluted at 1:1000), beta Actin (Abcam ab1801, diluted at 1:1000)
MicroRNAs involved in regulating HIFs and HIF regulatory gene levels in ECs
| miRNA | Cell type | Impact of hypoxia on miRNA expression | miRNA target (s) (direct or indirect*) | Investigated processes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Choroidal endothelial cells | Upregulated |
| Proliferation migration | [ |
|
| Endothelial progenitor cells—EPCs | Upregulated |
| Differentiation | [ |
| miR-135b | HUVECs | Upregulated |
| Angiogenesis | [ |
|
| |||||
|
| Mouse skin endothelial SENDs cells and HUVECs | Upregulated |
| Angiogenesis hypoxia | [ |
|
| Endometrial stromal cells; endothelial EA.hy926 cells | Not shown |
| Angiogenesis | [ |
| miR-200b | HMVECs | Downregulated upregulated |
| Angiogenesis hypoxia | [ |
| HUVECs |
| ||||
|
| HUVECs | Upregulated |
| Angiogenesis hypoxia | [ |
|
| |||||
| miR-424 | HUVECs, hMVECs, hBOECs and hMBECs | Upregulated |
| Angiogenesis | [ |
|
| |||||
|
| HUVECs | Upregulated |
| Hypoxia | [ |
|
| |||||
|
| HUVECs | Downregulated |
| Proliferation and migration | [ |
miRNAs proven to directly bind HIF mRNAs are in bold, and indirect effects are marked with “*”
ARNT aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator, CUL2 cullin-2, EFNA3 ephrin A3, EGLN1 prolyl hydroxylase domain-containing protein 2 (PHD2), ETS1 ETS Proto-Oncogene 1, Transcription Factor, HIF1A hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha, HIF1AN hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha inhibitor, HIF3A hypoxia-inducible factor 3 alpha, KLF2 Kruppel-like factor 2
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the miRNA role in the HIF switch regulation
Fig. 4Potential miRNA therapeutic strategies. a agomiRs—exogenous miRNA overexpression impairs translation and leads to decreased stability of the majority of the target mRNAs. b antagomiRs—reduction of endogenous miRNA levels leads to increased stability and translation of the majority of the target mRNAs c. Target protector prevents miRNA binding to a defined specific target mRNA, leading to increased stability and translation of this mRNA (without any impact on other potential mRNA targets)
Fig. 5Schematic representation of the morpholino structures complementarily to the mRNA. Morpholinos have a modification of the natural RNA in which the 5-membered sugar ring is replaced by the 6-membered morpholine ring and the negatively charged phosphate intersubunit linkages are replaced by nonionic phosphorodiamidate intersubunit linkages