| Literature DB >> 32633061 |
Ffion R Hammond1, Amy Lewis1, Philip M Elks1.
Abstract
Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) have emerged in recent years as critical regulators of immunity. Localised, low oxygen tension is a hallmark of inflamed and infected tissues. Subsequent myeloid cell HIF stabilisation plays key roles in the innate immune response, alongside emerging oxygen-independent roles. Manipulation of regulatory proteins of the HIF transcription factor family can profoundly influence inflammatory profiles, innate immune cell function and pathogen clearance and, as such, has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy against inflammatory diseases. The direction and mode of HIF manipulation as a therapy are dictated by the inflammatory properties of the disease in question, with innate immune cell HIF reduction being, in general, advantageous during chronic inflammatory conditions, while upregulation of HIF is beneficial during infections. The therapeutic potential of targeting myeloid HIFs, both genetically and pharmacologically, has been recently illuminated in vitro and in vivo, with an emerging range of inhibitory and activating strategies becoming available. This review focuses on cutting edge findings that uncover the roles of myeloid cell HIF signalling on immunoregulation in the contexts of inflammation and infection and explores future directions of potential therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: HIF; hypoxia; infection; inflammation; innate immunity
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32633061 PMCID: PMC7362030 DOI: 10.1111/febs.15476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEBS J ISSN: 1742-464X Impact factor: 5.622
Fig. 1Genetic and pharmacological manipulation of HIF signalling. A schematic of intracellular regulation of the HIF‐α subunit, with normoxia on the left and hypoxia on the right. The therapeutic potential of targeting HIFs both genetically (orange text) and pharmacologically (green text) has been facilitated by an emerging range of both inhibitory and activating compounds/techniques (listed around the edge of the diagram). In normoxia (blue box), the HIF‐α subunit is targeted for degradation. This can be prevented genetically and pharmacologically via blocking initial hydroxylation by prolyl‐hydroxylases (PHDs) or factor‐inhibiting HIF (FIH), inhibiting Von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) binding to HIF‐α or reversing ubiquitination. In hypoxia (purple box), HIF‐α is stabilised and translocates to the nucleus to bind aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT) and cofactors p300 and CREB‐binding protein (CBP) to transcribe downstream targets. HIF‐α transcription can be inhibited via targeting HIF‐α directly using mutant animals/cells, by RNA‐based approaches (e.g. siRNA), or via blocking the nuclear accumulation of HIF‐α or the dimerisation of HIF‐α/ARNT complex.
Fig. 2The contribution of HIF‐1α to infection outcomes. Figure showing the effects of HIF manipulation on bacterial, fungal and parasitic infection outcomes. Generally, HIF‐1α stabilisation is beneficial in the context of bacterial infections, for example Mycobacterium tuberculosis/marinum (blue column); however, the level of HIF‐1α must be carefully balanced, with too little or too much resulting in excess inflammation and detrimental infection outcome. HIF‐1α knockouts have decreases in IFNγ [77], IL‐1β [51] and IL‐6 [51] leading to excess tissue damage and lower survival [46]. Early HIF‐1α stabilisation increases inflammatory factors leading to myeloid control of infection [48, 49, 50], while excessive HIF‐1α can lead to prolonged inflammation and larger TB lesions in later stage disease [51]. In the context of the fungal infection Candida albicans (yellow column), HIF‐1α knockout decreases pro‐inflammatory factors while increasing anti‐inflammatory IL‐10 leading to increased fungal survival [55]. HIF‐1α stabilisation improves infection outcome, re‐arming the host inflammatory response leading to increased fungal death [55, 58]. In the parasitic infection Leishmania donovani (purple column), reducing HIF‐1α improves infection outcome, as the parasite itself upregulates host HIF‐1α, and stabilised HIF‐1α prevents CD8 + T‐cell expansion, exacerbating the infection further [62, 63, 64, 78]. Each infection context is distinct, requiring a tailored and controlled HIF‐α response that is not uniform across infections.