Overexpression of PH-4, a novel putative proline 4-hydroxylase, modulates activity of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors.

Article Details

Citation

Oehme F, Ellinghaus P, Kolkhof P, Smith TJ, Ramakrishnan S, Hutter J, Schramm M, Flamme I

Overexpression of PH-4, a novel putative proline 4-hydroxylase, modulates activity of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors.

Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2002 Aug 16;296(2):343-9.

PubMed ID
12163023 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs) are important for transcriptional adaptation to hypoxia. Availability of HIFs is regulated via posttranslational modification of their alpha subunits (HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha). Under normoxia, two highly conserved proline residues within the oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODDD) are hydroxylated by oxoglutarate-dependent proline 4-hydroxylases EGLN1-3. Hydroxylated HIF-alpha interacts with the pVHL-E3 ubiquitin ligase complex and, subsequently, is degraded via the proteasomal pathway. We identified a novel putative proline 4-hydroxylase, PH-4, with an aminoterminal EF-hand motif and a carboxyterminal catalytic domain, which was highly expressed in most organs, and-unlike EGLNs which localize to the cytoplasm and nucleus-was associated with the endoplasmic reticulum. Like EGLNs, PH-4 overexpressed in cellular reporter assays suppressed the HIF transactivation activity, dependent on the consensus ODDD proline residues. Suppression of transactivation was correlated with decrease of cellular contents of HIF. Thus, PH-4 might be related to cellular oxygen sensing.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Egl nine homolog 2Q96KS0Details
Egl nine homolog 1Q9GZT9Details
Egl nine homolog 3Q9H6Z9Details
Transmembrane prolyl 4-hydroxylaseQ9NXG6Details