Abstract

BackgroundIn mammalians, HIF is a master regulator of hypoxia gene expression through direct binding to DNA, while its role in microRNA expression regulation, critical in the hypoxia response, is not elucidated genome wide. Our aim is to investigate in depth the regulation of microRNA expression by hypoxia in the breast cancer cell line MCF-7, establish the relationship between microRNA expression and HIF binding sites, pri-miRNA transcription and microRNA processing gene expression.MethodsMCF-7 cells were incubated at 1% Oxygen for 16, 32 and 48 h. SiRNA against HIF-1α and HIF-2α were performed as previously published. MicroRNA and mRNA expression were assessed using microRNA microarrays, small RNA sequencing, gene expression microarrays and Real time PCR. The Kraken pipeline was applied for microRNA-seq analysis along with Bioconductor packages. Microarray data was analysed using Limma (Bioconductor), ChIP-seq data were analysed using Gene Set Enrichment Analysis and multiple testing correction applied in all analyses.ResultsHypoxia time course microRNA sequencing data analysis identified 41 microRNAs significantly up- and 28 down-regulated, including hsa-miR-4521, hsa-miR-145-3p and hsa-miR-222-5p reported in conjunction with hypoxia for the first time. Integration of HIF-1α and HIF-2α ChIP-seq data with expression data showed overall association between binding sites and microRNA up-regulation, with hsa-miR-210-3p and microRNAs of miR-27a/23a/24-2 and miR-30b/30d clusters as predominant examples. Moreover the expression of hsa-miR-27a-3p and hsa-miR-24-3p was found positively associated to a hypoxia gene signature in breast cancer. Gene expression analysis showed no full coordination between pri-miRNA and microRNA expression, pointing towards additional levels of regulation. Several transcripts involved in microRNA processing were found regulated by hypoxia, of which DICER (down-regulated) and AGO4 (up-regulated) were HIF dependent. DICER expression was found inversely correlated to hypoxia in breast cancer.ConclusionsIntegrated analysis of microRNA, mRNA and ChIP-seq data in a model cell line supports the hypothesis that microRNA expression under hypoxia is regulated at transcriptional and post-transcriptional level, with the presence of HIF binding sites at microRNA genomic loci associated with up-regulation. The identification of hypoxia and HIF regulated microRNAs relevant for breast cancer is important for our understanding of disease development and design of therapeutic interventions.

Highlights

  • In mammalians, hypoxic inducible family of transcription factors (HIF) is a master regulator of hypoxia gene expression through direct binding to DNA, while its role in microRNA expression regulation, critical in the hypoxia response, is not elucidated genome wide

  • Integrated analysis of microRNA, mRNA and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-seq data in a model cell line supports the hypothesis that microRNA expression under hypoxia is regulated at transcriptional and post-transcriptional level, with the presence of HIF binding sites at microRNA genomic loci associated with up-regulation

  • We found that 184 microRNAs were from only one strand, so there were no detectable traces of the other hairpin arm and 114 microRNAs have both the 5p and 3p strands expressed

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Summary

Introduction

HIF is a master regulator of hypoxia gene expression through direct binding to DNA, while its role in microRNA expression regulation, critical in the hypoxia response, is not elucidated genome wide. Under low cellular oxygen levels, the hypoxic inducible family of transcription factors (HIF) drive a complex transcriptional response that affects several biological processes relevant for the fate of the cells under these conditions, including glycolysis, angiogenesis and apoptosis [2]. HIFalpha protein levels are regulated by the Von Hippel Lindau (VHL) protein which mediates the ubiquitination of HIF-alpha by recognising and binding to two prolyl-hydroxylated residues, resulting on a rapid elimination of HIF-alpha. FIH-1 catalyses the formation of a specific hydroxyasparaginyl residue in HIF-alpha that reduces its binding to the transcriptional coactivator p300 (for a review see [3,4]). Since the hydroxylation of HIF-alpha residues by PHDs and FIH is oxygen dependent, HIF-alpha is able to escape VHL recognition and further proteasomal degradation under hypoxic conditions, bind to p300 and HIF-beta and induce transcriptional changes that affect microRNAs

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