| Literature DB >> 35285794 |
Kelsie R S Doering1,2,3, Xuanjin Cheng2,3,4, Luke Milburn5, Ramesh Ratnappan6, Arjumand Ghazi6,7, Dana L Miller5, Stefan Taubert1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The response to insufficient oxygen (hypoxia) is orchestrated by the conserved hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF). However, HIF-independent hypoxia response pathways exist that act in parallel with HIF to mediate the physiological hypoxia response. Here, we describe a hypoxia response pathway controlled by Caenorhabditis elegans nuclear hormone receptor NHR-49, an orthologue of mammalian peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα). We show that nhr-49 is required for animal survival in hypoxia and is synthetic lethal with hif-1 in this context, demonstrating that these factors act in parallel. RNA-seq analysis shows that in hypoxia nhr-49 regulates a set of genes that are hif-1-independent, including autophagy genes that promote hypoxia survival. We further show that nuclear hormone receptor nhr-67 is a negative regulator and homeodomain-interacting protein kinase hpk-1 is a positive regulator of the NHR-49 pathway. Together, our experiments define a new, essential hypoxia response pathway that acts in parallel with the well-known HIF-mediated hypoxia response.Entities:
Keywords: C. elegans; HIF; autophagy; chromosomes; gene expression; genetics; genomics; hypoxia; nuclear receptor; transcription factors
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35285794 PMCID: PMC8959602 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.67911
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140