Publication | Open Access
Hypoxia-Inducible Factor-1α Obstructs a Wnt Signaling Pathway by Inhibiting the hARD1-Mediated Activation of β-Catenin
122
Citations
35
References
2008
Year
Splice VariantWnt Signaling PathwayHard1-mediated ActivationTcf4 ActivityRedox BiologySignaling PathwayCell RegulationRedox RegulatorRadiation OncologyCell SignalingHypoxia-inducible Factor-1αHealth SciencesMolecular PhysiologyHypoxia (Medicine)Gene ExpressionCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentHypoxia-induced Growth ArrestSignal TransductionPhysiologyTumor SuppressorMedicine
Although a splice variant of mouse mARD1s was found to acetylate and destabilize hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha), human hARD1 has no such activities. Nonetheless, hARD1 has been reported to bind directly with HIF-1alpha. Here, we addressed the functional significance of the hARD1-HIF-1alpha interaction. Because hARD1 acetylates and activates beta-catenin, we examined whether HIF-1alpha regulates the hARD1-mediated activation of Wnt signaling. It was found that HIF-1alpha binds hARD1 through the oxygen-dependent degradation domain and, in so doing, dissociates hARD1 from beta-catenin, which prevents beta-catenin acetylation. In LiCl-stimulated HEK293 or cancer cell lines with active Wnt signaling, beta-catenin acetylation and activity were suppressed in hypoxia, and these suppressions were mediated by HIF-1alpha. Moreover, HIF-1alpha disruption of hARD1/beta-catenin repressed TCF4 activity, resulting in c-Myc suppression and p21(cip1) induction. In addition, we confirmed that the HIF-1alpha NH(2) terminal inactivates TCF4 by directly binding beta-catenin. In conclusion, HIF-1alpha was found to inactivate the Wnt signaling by binding to hARD1 or beta-catenin, which may contribute to the hypoxia-induced growth arrest of tumor cells.
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