HIF-1alpha dysfunction in diabetes
- PMID: 20016290
- DOI: 10.4161/cc.9.1.10371
HIF-1alpha dysfunction in diabetes
Abstract
Diabetic wounds are a significant public health burden, with slow or nonhealing diabetic foot ulcers representing the leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputation in developed countries. These wounds heal poorly as a result of compromised blood vessel formation in response to ischemia. We have recently shown that this impairment in neovascularization results from a high glucose-induced defect in transactivation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha), the transcription factor regulating vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. HIF-1 dysfunction is the end result of reactive oxygen species-induced modification of its coactivator p300 by the glycolytic metabolite methylglyoxal. Use of the iron chelator-antioxidant deferoxamine (DFO) reversed these effects and normalized healing of humanized diabetic wounds in mice. Here, we present additional data demonstrating that HIF-1alpha activity, not stability, is impaired in the high glucose environment. We demonstrate that high glucose-induced impairments in HIF-1alpha transactivation persist even in the setting of constitutive HIF-1alpha protein overexpression. Further, we show that high glucose-induced hydroxylation of the C-terminal transactivation domain of HIF-1alpha (the primary pathway regulating HIF-1alpha/p300 binding) does not alter HIF-1alpha activity. We extend our study of DFO's therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of impaired wound healing by demonstrating improvements in tissue viability in diabetic mice with DFO-induced increases in VEGF expression and vascular proliferation. Since DFO has been in clinical use for decades, the potential of this drug to treat a variety of ischemic conditions in humans can be evaluated relatively quickly.
Comment in
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Hyperglycemia and hypoxia inducible factor, a multifaceted story.Cell Cycle. 2010 May;9(9):1856. doi: 10.4161/cc.9.9.11308. Epub 2010 May 25. Cell Cycle. 2010. PMID: 20404536 No abstract available.
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