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Publication : Protein kinase C binding protein 1 inhibits hypoxia-inducible factor-1 in the heart.

First Author  Schunke KJ Year  2019
Journal  Cardiovasc Res Volume  115
Issue  8 Pages  1332-1342
PubMed ID  30395227 Mgi Jnum  J:291507
Mgi Id  MGI:6444513 Doi  10.1093/cvr/cvy278
Citation  Schunke KJ, et al. (2019) Protein kinase C binding protein 1 inhibits hypoxia-inducible factor-1 in the heart. Cardiovasc Res 115(8):1332-1342
abstractText  AIMS: Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1alpha) is a key transcription factor responsible for the induction of genes that facilitate adaptation to hypoxia. To study HIF-1 signalling in the heart, we developed a mouse model in which an oxygen-stable form of HIF-1alpha can be inducibly expressed in cardiac myocytes, under the regulation of tetracycline. METHODS AND RESULTS: Remarkably, expression of the transgene in mice generated two distinct phenotypes. One was the expected expression of HIF-regulated transcripts and associated changes in cardiac angiogenesis and contractility. The other was an unresponsive phenotype with much less expression of typical HIF-response genes and substantial expression of a zinc-finger protein, Protein Kinase C Binding Protein 1 (PRKCBP1). We have demonstrated that this second phenotype is due to an insertion of a fragment of DNA upstream of the PRKCBP1 gene that contains two additional canonical HIF binding sites and leads to substantial HIF binding, assessed by chromatin immunoprecipitation, and transcriptional activation. This insertion is found only in the FVB strain of mice that contributed the alphaMHC-tet binding protein transgene to these biallelic mice. In HEK293 cells transfected with oxygen-stable HIF-1alpha and PRKCBP1, we demonstrated inhibition of HIF-1 activity by a luciferase reporter assay. Using mouse primary cells and cell lines, we show that transfection with oxygen-stable HIF-1alpha and PRKCBP1 reduced expression of direct HIF-1 gene targets and that knockdown of PRKCBP1 removes that negative inhibition. Consistent with previous reports suggesting that PRKCBP1 modulates the chromatin landscape, we found that HL-1 cells transfected with oxygen-stable HIF-1alpha and PRKCBP1 have reduced global 5-methyl cytosine compared to HIF-1 alone. CONCLUSION: We show genetic, transcriptional, biochemical, and physiological evidence that PRKCBP1 inhibits HIF activity. Identification of a new oxygen-dependent and previously unsuspected regulator of HIF may provide a target for new therapeutic approaches to ischaemic heart disease.
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