Abstract

Macrophages play important roles in many diseases and are frequently found in hypoxic areas. A chronic hypoxic microenvironment alters global cellular protein expression, but molecular details remain poorly understood. Although hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) is an established transcription factor allowing adaption to acute hypoxia, responses to chronic hypoxia are more complex. Based on a two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) approach, we aimed to identify proteins that are exclusively expressed under chronic but not acute hypoxia (1% O2). One of the identified proteins was cathepsin B (CTSB), and a knockdown of either HIF-1α or -2α in primary human macrophages pointed to an HIF-2α dependency. Although chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments confirmed HIF-2 binding to a CTSB enhancer in acute hypoxia, an increase of CTSB mRNA was evident only under chronic hypoxia. Along those lines, CTSB mRNA stability increased at 48 h but not at 8 h of hypoxia. However, RNA stability at 8 h of hypoxia was enhanced by a knockdown of tristetraprolin (TTP). Inactivation of TTP under prolonged hypoxia was facilitated by c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), and inhibition of this kinase lowered CTSB mRNA levels and stability. We postulate a TTP-dependent mechanism to explain delayed expression of CTSB under chronic hypoxia.

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