Abstract

Hypoxia is a pathophysiological condition that occurs during injury, ischemia, and stroke. It is characterized by a decrease of reactive oxygen intermediates and a change of the intracellular redox level. In tumors hypoxia is regarded as a trigger for enhanced growth and metastasis. Here we report that in HeLa cells, hypoxic conditions induce the transcriptional activation of c-fos transcription via the serum response element. Mutations in the binding site for the ternary complex factor Elk-1 and the serum response factor abolished this induction, indicating that a ternary complex at the serum response element is necessary for the induction of the c-fos gene under hypoxia. The transcription factor Elk-1 was covalently modified by phosphorylation in response to hypoxia. Furthermore this hyperphosphorylation of Elk-1, the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and the induction of c-fos transcripts were blocked by PD98059, a specific inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase kinase 1. An in vitro kinase assay with Elk-1 as substrate showed that MAPK is activated under hypoxia. The activation of MAPK corresponds temporally with the phosphorylation and activation of Elk-1. Thus, a decrease of the intracellular reactive oxygen intermediate level by hypoxia induces c-fos via the MAPK pathway. These results suggest that the intracellular redox levels may be directly coupled to tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis via Elk-1-dependent induction of c-Fos controlled genes.

Highlights

  • The activation of c-fos by mitogens and changes of the intracellular redox level is mainly mediated by the serum response element (SRE).1 The SRE is a regulatory element found in many growth factor-regulated promotors that directs the rapid

  • No significant induction could be detected using the ⌬ternary complex factors (TCFs) and ⌬SRF constructs (Fig. 1B, columns 2 and 3). These data show that the intact binding site for the ternary complex factor as well as the binding site for the serum response factor are required for the induction of the c-fos gene during hypoxia

  • Hypoxia Activates the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) Pathway—We explored if the phosphorylation of TCF/Elk-1 under hypoxic conditions was due to activation of MAPK

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Summary

Introduction

The activation of c-fos by mitogens and changes of the intracellular redox level is mainly mediated by the serum response element (SRE).1 The SRE is a regulatory element found in many growth factor-regulated promotors that directs the rapid. Transient transfection experiments using a luciferase reporter plasmid driven by two c-fos SRE binding elements showed an 8.4-fold induction upon hypoxic stimulation (Fig. 1B). These data show that the intact binding site for the ternary complex factor as well as the binding site for the serum response factor are required for the induction of the c-fos gene during hypoxia.

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