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The LIMD1 protein bridges an association between the prolyl hydroxylases and VHL to repress HIF-1 activity

The LIMD1 protein bridges an association between the prolyl hydroxylases and VHL to repress HIF-1 activity


Title: The LIMD1 protein bridges an association between the prolyl hydroxylases and VHL to repress HIF-1 activity
Author: Foxler, Daniel E.
Bridge, Katherine S.
James, Victoria
Webb, Thomas M.
Mee, Maureen
Wong, Sybil C. K.
Feng, Yunfeng
Constantin-Teodosiu, Dumitru
Petursdottir, Thorgunnur Eyfjord
Bjornsson, Johannes
... 4 more authors Show all authors
Date: 2012-01-29
Language: English
Scope: 201-208
University/Institute: Háskóli Íslands
University of Iceland
Department: Institute for Experimental Pathology, Keldur (UI)
Tilraunastöð í meinafræði að Keldum (HÍ)
Series: Nature Cell Biology;14(2)
ISSN: 1465-7392
1476-4679 (eISSN)
DOI: 10.1038/ncb2424
Subject: Cell Biology; LIMD1; VHL; HIF; Transcription factor; Protein degradation; Tumour suppressor; Hypoxia regulation; Frumulíffræði; Prótín
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/1344

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Citation:

Foxler, D. E., Bridge, K. S., James, V., Webb, T. M., Mee, M., Wong, S. C. K., . . . Sharp, T. V. (2012). The LIMD1 protein bridges an association between the prolyl hydroxylases and VHL to repress HIF-1 activity. Nature Cell Biology, 14(2), 201-208. doi:10.1038/ncb2424

Abstract:

There are three prolyl hydroxylases (PHD1, 2 and 3) that regulate the hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), the master transcriptional regulators that respond to changes in intracellular O(2) tension. In high O(2) tension (normoxia) the PHDs hydroxylate two conserved proline residues on HIF-1α, which leads to binding of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumour suppressor, the recognition component of a ubiquitin-ligase complex, initiating HIF-1α ubiquitylation and degradation. However, it is not known whether PHDs and VHL act separately to exert their enzymatic activities on HIF-1α or as a multiprotein complex. Here we show that the tumour suppressor protein LIMD1 (LIM domain-containing protein) acts as a molecular scaffold, simultaneously binding the PHDs and VHL, thereby assembling a PHD-LIMD1-VHL protein complex and creating an enzymatic niche that enables efficient degradation of HIF-1α. Depletion of endogenous LIMD1 increases HIF-1α levels and transcriptional activity in both normoxia and hypoxia. Conversely, LIMD1 expression downregulates HIF-1 transcriptional activity in a manner depending on PHD and 26S proteasome activities. LIMD1 family member proteins Ajuba and WTIP also bind to VHL and PHDs 1 and 3, indicating that these LIM domain-containing proteins represent a previously unrecognized group of hypoxic regulators.

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