Abstract
Formation of the eye lens depends on the continuous differentiation of lens epithelial cells into lens fiber cells. To attain their mature structure and transparent function, nascent lens fiber cells must complete a precise cellular remodeling program hallmarked by the complete elimination of organelles to form the core lens organelle-free zone (OFZ). Lacking a blood supply, the lens resides in a hypoxic environment that results in a decreasing oxygen concentration from the lens surface to the lens core. This oxygen gradient results in a hypoxic microenvironment in the region of the lens where immature lens fiber cells initiate loss of organelles to form the core OFZ. These features of the lens suggest a potential role for low lens oxygen levels in the regulation of organelle degradation and other events critical for mature lens fiber cell formation. Hypoxia activates the master regulator of the hypoxic response, hypoxia-inducible factor 1a (HIF1a) that regulates hypoxia-responsive genes. To identify a potential role for hypoxia and HIF1a in the elimination of organelles during lens fiber cell maturation, we tested the requirement for hypoxia in the degradation of non-nuclear organelles in ex vivo cultured embryonic chick lenses by monitoring the degradation of mitochondria (MT), Golgi apparatus (GA) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) under conditions of low (1% O2) and high (21% O2) oxygen. We also examined the requirement for HIF1a activation for elimination of these organelles under the same conditions using a specific HIF1a activator (DMOG) and a specific HIF1a inhibitor (chetomin) and examined the requirements for hypoxia and HIF1a for regulating transcription of BNIP3L that we previously showed to be required for elimination of non-nuclear lens organelles. We used ChIP-qPCR to confirm direct binding of HIF1a to the 5' untranslated region of the BNIP3L gene. Finally, we examined the effects of expressing an oxygen insensitive mutant form of HIF1a (P402A/P565A) and BNIP3L on non-nuclear organelle degradation. Our data demonstrate that hypoxia and HIF1a are required for the degradation of non-nuclear organelles during lens fiber cell formation and that they regulate this process by governing BNIP3L transcription. Our results also provide evidence that hypoxia and HIF1a are essential for achieving mature lens structure.
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