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Serum lipoprotein–derived fatty acids regulate hypoxia-inducible factor

Wei Shao, Jiwon Hwang, Chune Liu, Debaditya Mukhopadhyay, Shan Zhao, Meng‐Chieh Shen, Ebru S. Selen Alpergin, Michael J. Wolfgang, Steven Farber, Peter J. Espenshade

2020Journal of Biological Chemistry15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Oxygen regulates hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) transcription factors to control cell metabolism, erythrogenesis, and angiogenesis. Whereas much has been elucidated about how oxygen regulates HIF, whether lipids affect HIF activity is un-known. Here, using cultured cells and two animal models, we demonstrate that lipoprotein-derived fatty acids are an independent regulator of HIF. Decreasing extracellular lipid supply inhibited HIF prolyl hydroxylation, leading to accumulation of the HIFα subunit of these heterodimeric transcription factors comparable with hypoxia with activation of downstream target genes. The addition of fatty acids to culture medium suppressed this signal, which required an intact mitochondrial respiratory chain. Mechanistically, fatty acids and oxygen are distinct signals integrated to control HIF activity. Finally, we observed lipid signaling to HIF and changes in target gene expression in developing zebrafish and adult mice, and this pathway operates in cancer cells from a range of tissues. This study identifies fatty acids as a physiological modulator of HIF, defining a mechanism for lipoprotein regulation that functions in parallel to oxygen.

Topics & Concepts

ZebrafishHydroxylationTranscription factorHypoxia-inducible factorsCell biologyAngiogenesisBiologyLipid metabolismBiochemistryLipoproteinHypoxia-Inducible Factor 1Hypoxia (environmental)ChemistryGeneCholesterolOxygenEnzymeCancer researchOrganic chemistryCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismCancer, Lipids, and MetabolismPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors
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