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C. elegans EGL-9 and mammalian homologs define a family of dioxygenases that regulate HIF by prolyl hydroxylation

Authors :
David R. Mole
Christopher J. Schofield
Robert Barstead
Norma Masson
Andrew C. R Epstein
Patrick H. Maxwell
Donald L. Hamilton
Mridul Mukherji
Luke A. McNeill
Ya-Min Tian
J F O'Rourke
Jonathan Hodgkin
Anu Dhanda
Jonathan M. Gleadle
Christopher W. Pugh
Panu Jaakkola
Eric Metzen
Kirsty S. Hewitson
Michael A Wilson
Peter J. Ratcliffe
Source :
Flinders University PURE
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

HIF is a transcriptional complex that plays a central role in mammalian oxygen homeostasis. Recent studies have defined posttranslational modification by prolyl hydroxylation as a key regulatory event that targets HIF-α subunits for proteasomal destruction via the von Hippel-Lindau ubiquitylation complex. Here, we define a conserved HIF-VHL-prolyl hydroxylase pathway in C. elegans, and use a genetic approach to identify EGL-9 as a dioxygenase that regulates HIF by prolyl hydroxylation. In mammalian cells, we show that the HIF-prolyl hydroxylases are represented by a series of isoforms bearing a conserved 2-histidine-1-carboxylate iron coordination motif at the catalytic site. Direct modulation of recombinant enzyme activity by graded hypoxia, iron chelation, and cobaltous ions mirrors the characteristics of HIF induction in vivo, fulfilling requirements for these enzymes being oxygen sensors that regulate HIF.

Details

ISSN :
00928674
Volume :
107
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6be00f40f002e15491c802817f0e0cc