Determination and modulation of prolyl-4-hydroxylase domain oxygen sensor activity.
作者信息
Wirthner Renato, Balamurugan Kuppusamy, Stiehl Daniel P, Barth Sandra, Spielmann Patrick, Oehme Felix, Flamme Ingo, Katschinski Dörthe M, Wenger Roland H, Camenisch Gieri
机构信息
Institute of Physiology and Zürich Center for Integrative Human Physiology, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
出版信息
Methods Enzymol. 2007;435:43-60. doi: 10.1016/S0076-6879(07)35003-9.
The prolyl-4-hydroxylase domain (PHD) oxygen sensor proteins hydroxylate hypoxia-inducible transcription factor (HIF)-alpha (alpha) subunits, leading to their subsequent ubiquitinylation and degradation. Since oxygen is a necessary cosubstrate, a reduction in oxygen availability (hypoxia) decreases PHD activity and, subsequently, HIF-alpha hydroxylation. Non-hydroxylated HIF-alpha cannot be bound by the ubiquitin ligase von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor protein (pVHL), and HIF-alpha proteins thus become stabilized. HIF-alpha then heterodimerizes with HIF-beta (beta) to form the functionally active HIF transcription factor complex, which targets approximately 200 genes involved in adaptation to hypoxia. The three HIF-alpha PHDs are of a different nature compared with the prototype collagen prolyl-4-hydroxylase, which hydroxylates a mass protein rather than a rare transcription factor. Thus, novel assays had to be developed to express and purify functionally active PHDs and to measure PHD activity in vitro. A need also exists for such assays to functionally distinguish the three different PHDs in terms of substrate specificity and drug function. We provide a detailed description of the expression and purification of the PHDs as well as of an HIF-alpha-dependent and a HIF-alpha-independent PHD assay.