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Publication : The hypoxia-inducible factor-C/EBPα axis controls ethanol-mediated hepcidin repression.

First Author  Anderson ER Year  2012
Journal  Mol Cell Biol Volume  32
Issue  19 Pages  4068-77
PubMed ID  22869521 Mgi Jnum  J:189135
Mgi Id  MGI:5444533 Doi  10.1128/MCB.00723-12
Citation  Anderson ER, et al. (2012) The hypoxia-inducible factor-C/EBPalpha axis controls ethanol-mediated hepcidin repression. Mol Cell Biol 32(19):4068-77
abstractText  Hepcidin is a liver-derived peptide hormone and the master regulator of systemic iron homeostasis. Decreased hepcidin expression is a common feature in alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and in mouse models of ethanol loading. Dysregulation of hepcidin signaling in ALD leads to liver iron deposition, which is a major contributing factor to liver injury. The mechanism by which hepcidin is regulated following ethanol treatment is unclear. An increase in liver hypoxia was observed in an acute ethanol-induced liver injury model. The hypoxic response is controlled by a family of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs), which are composed of an oxygen-regulated alpha subunit (HIFalpha) and a constitutively present beta subunit, aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (HIFbeta/Arnt). Disruption of liver HIF function reversed the repression of hepcidin following ethanol loading. Mouse models of liver HIF overexpression demonstrated that both HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha contribute to hepcidin repression in vivo. Ethanol treatment led to a decrease in CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein alpha (C/EBPalpha) protein expression in a HIF-dependent manner. Importantly, adenoviral rescue of C/EBPalpha in vivo ablated the hepcidin repression in response to ethanol treatment or HIF overexpression. These data provide novel insight into the regulation of hepcidin by hypoxia and indicate that targeting HIFs in the liver could be therapeutic in ALD.
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