4.5 Article

Proteomics-based identification of two novel direct targets of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 and their potential roles in migration/invasion of cancer cells

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 9, Issue 15, Pages 3901-3912

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200800922

Keywords

DIGE; Hypoxia-inducible facotor-1; Macrophage-capping protein; S100 calcium-binding protein A4; Target genes

Funding

  1. National Key Technologies RD Program [2006CB910104, 2006AA02Z105]
  2. National Key Science Program [2009CB918400]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation [90813034, 30500215, 30600216, 30800452]
  4. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai [08JC1413700]
  5. Chang Jiang Scholar of Ministry of Education of China
  6. Shanghai Ling-Jun Talent Program

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Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1), consisting of oxygen-sensitive HIF-1 alpha and constitutively expressed HIF-1 beta subunits, is a master transcriptional activator for cellular response to hypoxia. To explore direct HIF-1 targets, here we used differential gel electrophoresis (DIGE) to compare the HIF-1-regulated proteins between leukemic U937T-cell line with and without conditional induction of HIF-1 alpha protein by tetracychne-off system. Among the upregulated proteins identified, mRNA levels of annexin A1, macrophage-capping protein (CapG), S100 calcium-binding protein A4 (S100A4), S100A11, acyl-CoA-binding protein and calcyclin-binding protein also increased. The expressions of the annexin A1, CapG and S100A4 genes were significantly induced by hypoxia in five adherent cell lines tested besides U937 cells, while their expressions were blocked by the short hairpin RNA specifically against HIF-1 alpha. Further luciferase reporter assay and chromatin immunoprecipitation showed that HIF-1 alpha directly bound to three hypoxia-responsive elements located at intron 1 of S100A4 gene and hypoxia-responsive element at -350 to -346 of CapG gene, which are essential for HIF-1-induced expression. Additionally, the role of S100A4 expression in migration and invasion of cancer cells were also confirmed. These findings would provide new sights for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying HIF-1 action.

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