Abstract

The glycoprotein hormone erythropoietin (EPO) is an essential growth and survival factor for erythroid progenitor cells, and the rate of red blood cell production is normally determined by the serum EPO concentration. EPO production is inversely related to oxygen availability, so that an effective feedback loop is established, which controls erythropoiesis. Since recombinant EPO became available as an effective therapeutic agent, significant progress has also been made in understanding the basis of this feedback control. The main determinant of EPO synthesis is the transcriptional activity of its gene in liver and kidneys, which is related to local oxygen tensions. This control is achieved by hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIF), consisting of a constitutive beta-subunit and one of two alternative oxygen-regulated HIFalpha subunits (HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha). In the presence of oxygen (normoxia) the HIFalpha subunits are hydroxylated, which targets them for proteasomal degradation. Under hypoxia, because of the lack of molecular oxygen, HIF cannot be hydroxylated and is thereby stabilized. Although HIF-1alpha was the first transcription factor identified through its ability to bind to an enhancer sequence of the EPO gene, more recent evidence suggests that HIF-2alpha is responsible for the regulation of EPO. Although EPO is a prime example for an oxygen- regulated gene, the role of the HIF system goes far beyond the regulation of EPO, because it operates widely in almost all cells and controls a broad transcriptional response to hypoxia, including genes involved in cell metabolism, angiogenesis and vascular tone. Further evidence suggests that apart from its effect as an erythropoietic hormone EPO acts as a paracrine, tissue-protective protein in the brain and possibly also in other organs.

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