[PDF][PDF] Ferritin-mediated iron sequestration stabilizes hypoxia-inducible factor-1α upon LPS activation in the presence of ample oxygen

I Siegert, J Schödel, M Nairz, V Schatz, K Dettmer… - Cell reports, 2015 - cell.com
I Siegert, J Schödel, M Nairz, V Schatz, K Dettmer, C Dick, J Kalucka, K Franke…
Cell reports, 2015cell.com
Both hypoxic and inflammatory conditions activate transcription factors such as hypoxia-
inducible factor (HIF)-1α and nuclear factor (NF)-κB, which play a crucial role in adaptive
responses to these challenges. In dendritic cells (DC), lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced
HIF1α accumulation requires NF-κB signaling and promotes inflammatory DC function. The
mechanisms that drive LPS-induced HIF1α accumulation under normoxia are unclear. Here,
we demonstrate that LPS inhibits prolyl hydroxylase domain enzyme (PHD) activity and …
Summary
Both hypoxic and inflammatory conditions activate transcription factors such as hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α and nuclear factor (NF)-κB, which play a crucial role in adaptive responses to these challenges. In dendritic cells (DC), lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced HIF1α accumulation requires NF-κB signaling and promotes inflammatory DC function. The mechanisms that drive LPS-induced HIF1α accumulation under normoxia are unclear. Here, we demonstrate that LPS inhibits prolyl hydroxylase domain enzyme (PHD) activity and thereby blocks HIF1α degradation. Of note, LPS-induced PHD inhibition was neither due to cosubstrate depletion (oxygen or α-ketoglutarate) nor due to increased levels of reactive oxygen species, fumarate, and succinate. Instead, LPS inhibited PHD activity through NF-κB-mediated induction of the iron storage protein ferritin and subsequent decrease of intracellular available iron, a critical cofactor of PHD. Thus, hypoxia and LPS both induce HIF1α accumulation via PHD inhibition but deploy distinct molecular mechanisms (lack of cosubstrate oxygen versus deprivation of co-factor iron).
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