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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Translational control of collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase-alpha(I) gene expression under hypoxia.

Hypoxia is a pro-fibrotic stimulus, which is associated with enhanced collagen synthesis, as well as with augmented collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase (C-P4H) activity. C-P4H activity is controlled mainly by regulated expression of the alpha C-P4H subunit. In this study we demonstrate that the increased synthesis of C-P4H-alpha(I) protein in human HT1080 fibroblasts under long term hypoxia (36 h, 1% oxygen) is controlled at the translational level. This is mediated by an interaction of RNA-binding protein nucleolin (approximately 64 kDa form) at the 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions ( UTR) of the mRNA. The 5'/3'-UTR-dependent mechanism elevates the C-P4H-alpha(I) expression rate 2.3-fold, and participates in a 5.3-fold increased protein level under long term hypoxia. The interaction of nucleolin at the 5'-UTR occurs directly and depends on the existence of an AU-rich element. Statistical evaluation of the approximately 64-kDa nucleolin/RNA interaction studies revealed a core binding sequence, corresponding to UAAAUC or AAAUCU. At the 3'-UTR, nucleolin assembles indirectly via protein/protein interaction, with the help of another 3'-UTR-binding protein, presumably annexin A2. The increased protein level of the approximately 64-kDa nucleolin under hypoxia can be attributed to an autocatalytic cleavage of a high molecular weight nucleolin form, without alterations in nucleolin mRNA concentration. Thus, the alteration of translational efficiency by nucleolin, which occurs through a hypoxia inducible factor independent pathway, is an important step in C-P4H-alpha(I) regulation under hypoxia.[1]

References

  1. Translational control of collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase-alpha(I) gene expression under hypoxia. Fähling, M., Mrowka, R., Steege, A., Nebrich, G., Perlewitz, A., Persson, P.B., Thiele, B.J. J. Biol. Chem. (2006) [Pubmed]
 
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