HIF-1 Regulates Iron Homeostasis in by Activation and Inhibition of Genes Involved in Iron Uptake and Storage
Caenorhabditis elegans ftn-1 and ftn-2, which encode the iron-storage protein ferritin, are transcriptionally inhibited during iron deficiency in intestine. Intestinal specific transcription is dependent on binding of ELT-2 to GATA binding sites in an iron-dependent enhancer (IDE) located in ftn-1 and ftn-2 promoters, but the mechanism for iron regulation is unknown. Here, we identify HIF-1 (hypoxia-inducible factor -1) as a negative regulator of ferritin transcription. HIF-1 binds to hypoxia-response elements (HREs) in the IDE in vitro and in vivo. Depletion of hif-1 by RNA interference blocks transcriptional inhibition of ftn-1 and ftn-2 reporters, and ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNAs are not regulated in a hif-1 null strain during iron deficiency. An IDE is also present in smf-3 encoding a protein homologous to mammalian divalent metal transporter-1. Unlike the ftn-1 IDE, the smf-3 IDE is required for HIF-1–dependent transcriptional activation of smf-3 during iron deficiency. We show that hif-1 null worms grown under iron limiting conditions are developmentally delayed and that depletion of FTN-1 and FTN-2 rescues this phenotype. These data show that HIF-1 regulates intestinal iron homeostasis during iron deficiency by activating and inhibiting genes involved in iron uptake and storage.
Published in the journal:
HIF-1 Regulates Iron Homeostasis in by Activation and Inhibition of Genes Involved in Iron Uptake and Storage. PLoS Genet 7(12): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002394
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002394
Summary
Caenorhabditis elegans ftn-1 and ftn-2, which encode the iron-storage protein ferritin, are transcriptionally inhibited during iron deficiency in intestine. Intestinal specific transcription is dependent on binding of ELT-2 to GATA binding sites in an iron-dependent enhancer (IDE) located in ftn-1 and ftn-2 promoters, but the mechanism for iron regulation is unknown. Here, we identify HIF-1 (hypoxia-inducible factor -1) as a negative regulator of ferritin transcription. HIF-1 binds to hypoxia-response elements (HREs) in the IDE in vitro and in vivo. Depletion of hif-1 by RNA interference blocks transcriptional inhibition of ftn-1 and ftn-2 reporters, and ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNAs are not regulated in a hif-1 null strain during iron deficiency. An IDE is also present in smf-3 encoding a protein homologous to mammalian divalent metal transporter-1. Unlike the ftn-1 IDE, the smf-3 IDE is required for HIF-1–dependent transcriptional activation of smf-3 during iron deficiency. We show that hif-1 null worms grown under iron limiting conditions are developmentally delayed and that depletion of FTN-1 and FTN-2 rescues this phenotype. These data show that HIF-1 regulates intestinal iron homeostasis during iron deficiency by activating and inhibiting genes involved in iron uptake and storage.
Introduction
Iron is essential due to its presence in proteins involved in DNA synthesis, mitochondrial respiration and oxygen transport. Regulation of cellular iron content is crucial: excess cellular iron catalyzes the generation of reactive oxygen species that damage DNA and proteins, while cellular iron deficiency causes cell cycle arrest and cell death. Dysregulation of iron homeostasis caused by iron deficiency or iron excess leads to hematological, neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases in humans. Iron must therefore be maintained within a narrow range to avoid the adverse consequences of iron depletion or excess.
Maintaining iron content within this physiological range requires precise mechanisms for regulating its uptake, storage and export (for reviews, see [1], [2]). In mammals, dietary non-heme Fe3+ is reduced by membrane bound ferric reductases (e.g. duodenal cytochrome B or DCYTB) before transport across the enterocyte apical membrane by divalent metal transporter-1 (DMT1, also known as NRAMP2, SLC11a2 and DCT1) [3]. Cytosolic iron is either transported across the basolateral membrane into the circulation by ferroportin or sequestered in ferritin in a form unable to catalyze free radical formation [4], [5]. Iron export by ferroportin is dependent on oxidation to Fe3+ by membrane and soluble multicopper oxidases where it is incorporated into transferrin for delivery to tissues. When body iron stores are high, cytosolic iron is not exported into blood, and is instead sequestered into ferritin [5], . Iron in ferritin is lost by sloughing of enterocytes into the intestinal lumen.
Mammalian intestinal iron transport increases during iron deficiency due to hypoxia-inducible factor-2α (HIF-2α) mediated expression of DMT1 and DCYTB [7], [8]. HIFs (HIF-1 and HIF-2) are key regulators of cellular and systemic oxygen homeostasis (for reviews, see [9], [10]). HIF transcription factors consist of an oxygen-regulated α subunit (HIF-1α, HIF-2α and a constitutively expressed β subunit (HIF-1β, also known as aryl hydrocarbon nuclear translocator or ARNT). In the presence of iron and oxygen, HIF-α subunits are hydroxylated by iron- and oxygen-dependent prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs) and are targeted for proteasomal degradation by the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) E3 ubiquitin ligase. During hypoxia or iron deficiency, PHDs are inactivated, allowing HIF-1α /HIF-2β to accumulate. HIF-1α/HIF-2α dimerizes with HIF-β and binds to HREs in target genes to increase transcription. HIF regulates genes in diverse pathways including erythropoiesis, iron homeostasis, glucose metabolism, angiogenesis and cell survival (for reviews, see [9]–[11] ).
Oxygen and iron homeostasis pathways are conserved in Caenorhabditis elegans. The HIF-1 pathway in C. elegans consists of hif-1, aha-1, vhl-1 and egl-9, which are orthologous to genes encoding mammalian HIF-1α, HIF-1β, VHL and PHD [12]–[14]. C. elegans express a single hif gene, which encodes a protein homologous to vertebrate HIF-1α and HIF-2α [12]. C. elegans HIF-1 regulates target genes involved in metabolism, extracellular remodeling [15], nervous system development [16], oxygen-dependent behavior [17] and modulation of life span [18]. hif-1 mutant animals display increased embryonic and larval lethality in oxygen concentrations less than 1%, demonstrating the importance of HIF-1 for survival during hypoxia [13], [19].
C. elegans express genes homologous to ferritin (ftn-1 and ftn-2), DMT1 (smf-1, smf-2 and smf-3) and ferroportin (fpn-1.1, fpn-1.2 and fpn-1.3). Vertebrate ferritin is a mixture of 24 light-(L) and heavy-(H) subunits that form a shell that can accommodate up to 4500 iron atoms. The H-subunits exhibit ferroxidase activity and facilitate the oxidation of iron, whereas the L-subunits function with the H-subunits in iron nucleation [20], [21]. C. elegans FTN-1 and FTN-2 display greater homology to the human H-subunit (55% and 60%) than to the L-subunit (46% and 50%), and notably both proteins contain ferroxidase active-site residues. ftn-1 and ftn-2 genes are transcriptionally repressed during iron deficiency, which is dependent on an iron-dependent enhancer (IDE) located in the ftn-1 and ftn-2 promoters [22]–[24]. The IDE contains two GATA binding sites for the intestinal specific ELT2 transcription factor that regulates basal ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription, but the mechanism regulating iron-dependent transcriptional repression is unknown. Unlike ftn-1 and ftn-2, vertebrate ferritin-H and -L subunit mRNAs are translationally repressed by iron-regulatory proteins 1 and 2 (IRP1 and IRP2) during iron deficiency (for reviews, see [25]–[27]). SMF-1, SMF-2 and SMF-3 display 55–58% amino acid identity with mammalian DMT1 and are involved in Mn2+ uptake and sensing, but the role of these transporters in iron uptake is not well understood [28]–[30]. The function of ferroportin homologs FPN1.1, FPN-1.2 and FPN-1.3 in iron homeostasis has not been reported.
Here, we show that HIF-1 activates smf-3 transcription and inhibits ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription during iron deficiency. Transcriptional activation of smf-3 and repression of ftn-1 and ftn-2 is dependent on IDEs in their promoters that are similar but not identical. These studies show that HIF-1 is a key regulator of intestinal iron uptake and storage during iron deficiency in C. elegans.
Results
HIF-1 inhibits iron-dependent transcription of ftn-1 and ftn-2
Previous studies showed that ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription is activated by iron and inhibited by iron chelators [22]–[24]. Transcriptional regulation is mediated by the IDE located in the promoters of ftn-1 and ftn-2 genes (Figure 1A). The IDE contains two WGATAR sequences that are binding sites for the intestinal specific ELT2 GATA transcription factor. Mutation of either of the WGATAR sequences abolished expression of an ftn-1::GFP-his reporter showing that ELT-2 is required for ftn-1 transcription under iron sufficient conditions [24]. The IDE also contains three canonical HREs (TACGTG) in the reverse orientation that have been identified in hif-1 target genes [15], [31], suggesting a role for HIF-1 in iron-dependent ftn-1 and ftn-2 regulation.
To test this model, hif-1 RNAi was used to deplete HIF-1 in worms carrying an ftn-1::GFP-his or an ftn-2::GFP-his reporter. GFP expression was quantified using the COPAS Biosort after growth in NGM or NGM supplemented with the membrane permeable Fe2+ chelator, 2,2′-dipyridyl (NGM-BP) [32]. These reporters contain 1.9 kb of ftn-1 or ftn-2 promoter sequences, including the IDE, fused to the initiator ATG of nuclear-localized GFP-histone [24]. BP reduces expression of ftn-1::GFP-his and ftn-2::GFP-his in worms fed control (empty vector L4400) RNAi by 60% and 80%, respectively, compared to worms grown on NGM (Figure 1B and 1C). By contrast, the BP- induced reduction in GFP expression is blocked by hif-1 RNAi. Furthermore, hif-1 RNAi increases GFP expression in worms grown on NGM, indicating that HIF-1 is expressed under normal growth conditions, and is capable of inhibiting ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription.
We next determined whether endogenous ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNAs are regulated by HIF-1. ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNAs were measured in N2 wildtype animals cultured on NGM or NGM-BP and in strains carrying the loss-of function mutations in hif-1(ia04) and vhl-1(ok161). vhl-1(ok161) mutant animals lack VHL required for HIF-1 ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, leading to constitutive expression of HIF-1 [14], [31], [33]. Western blots confirm the absence of HIF-1 in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals and increased HIF-1 levels in vhl-1(ok161) mutant and in N2 wildtype animals cultured in NGM-BP (Figure 2A). BP reduces ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNA levels 75% and 20%, respectively, compared to untreated N2 wildtype animals. This is consistent with our previous studies showing that ftn-1 is more sensitive to iron chelators as compared to ftn-2 [22], [24]. By contrast, ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNA levels are not reduced by BP in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals, and notably hif-1(ia04) animals cultured in NGM express higher amounts of ftn-1 mRNA compared to N2 wildtype animals (Figure 2B). In vhl-1(ok161) mutant animals, ftn-1 and ftn-2 mRNAs are reduced to levels found in N2 wildtype animals cultured in NGM-BP. Taken together, these data show that ftn-1 and ftn-2 are transcriptionally inhibited by HIF-1 during iron deficiency.
HIF-1 binds to the IDE in vitro and in vivo
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays were used to determine whether HIF-1 binds to the HREs in the IDE. Radiolabeled wildtype IDE or an IDE containing mutations in the three HRE sites (HRE3m) was incubated with reticulocyte lysate-synthesized HIF-1 and AHA-1 (Figure 3A). Complex formation is only observed when HIF-1 and AHA-1 are present together in the reaction with wildtype IDE (Figure 3A). Addition of HIF-1 antibody to the reaction led to the formation of a slower migrating HIF-1/AHA-IDE complex (Figure 3A, lane 5). Formation of HIF-1/AHA-1-IDE complexes is competed away by unlabeled wildtype IDE but not by unlabeled HRE3m IDE, showing that HIF-1 specifically binds to the HREs (Figure 3B).
To determine whether the IDE is a direct HIF-1 target in vivo, ChIP was performed on chromatin isolated from vhl-1(ok161) and hif-1(ia04) mutant animals. The binding of HIF-1 to the IDE or to the ftn-1 coding region used as a negative control was determined by ChIP using HIF-1 antibody. IDE DNA was enriched 4-fold in vhl-1(ok161) immunoprecipitates as compared to hif-1(ia04) immunoprecipitates (Figure 3C). These studies indicate that HIF-1 binds to HREs in vitro and occupies the ftn-1 IDE in vivo.
The DMT1 ortholog SMF-3 is regulated by HIF-1 during iron deficiency
The activation of DMT1 by HIF-2α in iron-deficient mice increases intestinal iron uptake [7], [8]. C. elegans express three DMT1 homologs, SMF-1, SMF-2 and SMF-3. SMF-1 and SMF-3 are expressed in the apical membrane in intestinal cells and are involved in Mn2+ uptake [28], [30], whereas SMF-2 is mainly expressed in pharyngeal epithelial cells [28]–[30]. To determine whether HIF-1 regulates smf-1, smf-2 or smf-3 expression during iron deficiency, their mRNA levels were quantified in N2 wildtype and hif-1(ia04) mutant animals cultured in NGM or NGM-BP. BP increases smf-3 mRNA levels 2-fold as compared to untreated N2 wildtype animals, but has no effect on smf-1 or smf-2 mRNA levels (Figure 4A and data not shown). In hif-1(ia04) mutant animals, smf-3 mRNA levels are reduced by 50% as compared to N2 wildtype animals, and are not increased by BP (Figure 4A).
Inspection of the 5′ upstream regulatory region of smf-3 reveals a 118-nt element harboring three tandem GATA binding sites flanked by two HREs (Figure 4B). To determine whether this element functions as an iron enhancer, transgenic strains carrying a transcriptional reporter containing 1500 nt of smf-3 promoter sequences fused to GFP-his were generated. GFP expression was quantified in these strains after growth on NGM, NGM-ferric ammonium citrate (NGM-FAC) or NGM-BP. FAC reduces GFP expression, whereas BP increases GFP expression as compared to untreated worms (Figure 4C). To show that the BP-induced increase in GFP expression is due to iron chelation, GFP expression was quantified after culture of worms on NGM-BP in the presence of an equimolar amount of FAC or MnCl2. BP plus FAC, but not BP plus MnCl2, reduces smf-3(-1500)::GFP-his expression (Figure S1). hif-1 RNAi completely blocks BP-induced increased GFP expression (Figure 4D). Similarly, expression of a smf-3(-1500)::GFP-his reporter containing 250 nt of upstream sequences containing the IDE is increased by BP in control RNAi fed worms and is reduced by BP in hif-1 RNAi fed worms (Figure S2). Taken together, these data indicate that smf-3 is transcriptionally activated by HIF-1 during iron deficiency.
Iron content is reduced in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals
The localization of SMF-3 to the apical membrane of intestinal cells [28], [30] and its regulation by HIF-1 suggest a role for SMF-3 in intestinal iron uptake. If SMF-3 has a role in iron uptake, iron content might be expected to be reduced in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals. We found that ftn-1 mRNA levels, which are positively correlated with cellular iron levels (Figure 2), are reduced in smf-3(ok1035) mutants as compared to N2 wildtype animals, but not in smf-1(ok1748) or smf-2(gk133) mutant animals (Figure 5A). Quantification of metal content by inductively-coupled plasma spectroscopy (ICP) shows that total iron content in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals is 45% of N2 wildtype animals consistent with reduced ftn-1 mRNA levels in these animals (Figure 5B). The total iron content in smf-1(ok1748) and smf-2(gk133) mutant animals is not significantly different as compared to N2 wildtype animals. The total Mn content in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals is 60% of N2 wildtype controls (Figure 5B) in agreement with SMF-3 as a regulator of Mn uptake [28], [30]. The Mn content in the smf-1(ok1748) and smf-2(gk133) strains tended to be lower as compared to N2 wildtype controls, but did not reach significance. These results are consistent with a role for SMF-3 in intestinal iron transport.
Reduced viability of hif-1(ia04) mutant animals by iron deficiency is rescued by ftn-1 and ftn-2 RNAi
hif-1(ia04) mutant animals have no overt phenotype in normoxia, but display reduced viability in oxygen concentrations less than 1% [13], [34]. Similarly, we find that hif-1(ia04) mutant animals develop normally under normoxic conditions, but are developmentally delayed when cultured under iron deficient normoxic conditions (NGM plus 20 µM BP) as compared to N2 wildtype animals (Figure 6A). As total iron content is reduced in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals and smf-3 expression is reduced in hif-1(ia04) animals, these data suggest that total iron content might also be reduced in hif-1(ia04) animals. ICP analyses show that the total iron content in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals is 60% of N2 wildtype animals (Figure 6B). The total Mn content is also reduced in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals.
We next questioned whether the developmental delay observed in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals cultured in BP can be rescued by reducing FTN-1 and FTN-2 expression, which would lead to an increase in the cellular labile iron pool. This pool contains chelatable redox-active iron that constitutes less than 5% of total cellular iron [32], [35]. The modulation of ferritin levels is one mechanism for regulating the labile iron pool in mammalian cells: ferritin overexpression reduces the iron pool, while ferritin depletion increases this pool [36]–[38]. We depleted ftn-1 and ftn-2 by RNAi in N2 wildtype and in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals cultured on NGM or NGM plus 20 µM BP, and the number of worms reaching L4 stage was measured. ftn-1/ftn-2 RNAi increases the number of hif-1(ia04) mutant animals reaching L4 stage from 28% in untreated animals to 78% in ftn-1/ftn-2 RNAi-fed animals (Figure 6C). These data indicate that the developmental delay observed in hif-1(ia04) mutant animals during iron deficiency can be partially rescued by reducing FTN-1 and FTN-2 levels.
Discussion
Previous studies showed that ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription in intestine is activated by iron and inhibited by iron deficiency [22]–[24]. Transcriptional regulation is dependent on an IDE containing HIF-1 and GATA binding sites. The GATA factor ELT2 regulates basal intestinal ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription during iron sufficiency, but how transcription is repressed by iron deficiency was not understood. Here, we identify HIF-1 as a negative regulator of ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription during iron deficiency. We also show that smf-3 is regulated by HIF-1 during iron deficiency, but unlike ftn-1 and ftn-2, HIF-1 activates smf-3 transcription. The activation of smf-3 and inhibition of ftn-1 and ftn-2 by HIF-1 provides a mechanism to increase iron uptake and decrease iron storage during iron deficiency.
In mice, increased iron uptake by DMT1 during iron deficiency is mediated by HIF-2α [7], [8]. In contrast to the transcriptional regulation of ftn-1 and ftn-2 in C. elegans, vertebrate ferritin H- and -L subunit mRNAs are translationally repressed during iron deficiency by the binding of IRP1 and IRP2 to an iron-responsive element (IRE) in ferritin mRNAs [26]. When cellular iron levels increase, IRP1 is converted into a cytosolic aconitase concomitant with loss of RNA-binding activity and IRP2 is degraded, which leads to increased ferritin translation. Although C. elegans express an IRP1 homolog (ACO-1), it lacks RNA-binding activity and functions solely as a cytosolic aconitase [22]. The regulation of iron homeostasis by ftn-1and ftn-2 is essential as depletion of FTN-1 and FTN-2 rescues the growth delay observed in hif-1 null worms grown under iron limiting conditions. Recent studies show that constitutive expression of ferritin-H and -L subunits in mice with intestinal specific deletion of IRP1 and IRP2 have reduced survival rates [39]. Depletion of the intestinal ferritin-H gene in mice leads to reduced iron sequestration in intestine and increased body iron stores [40]. Taken together, these studies show that the precise regulation of intestinal ferritin expression is essential for appropriate control of iron absorption.
The transcriptional inhibition of ftn-1and ftn-2 genes by HIF-1 during iron deficiency was unexpected. HIF-1 is a potent transcriptional activator of hundreds of HRE target genes [15], [41], [42]. HIF has also been reported to function as a repressor, but the mechanism of transcriptional repression is not fully understood [43]–[48]. For some HIF-negatively regulated genes, transcriptional repression may be an indirect effect due to HIF activation of a transcriptional repressor [41], [42]. HIF-1 has also been shown to upregulate microRNA mir-120, which represses gene expression [49]. For other genes, direct binding of HIF to HREs in the promoters of negatively-regulated genes has been demonstrated using ChIP analysis [45]–[47]. These studies led to models whereby HIF-1 negatively regulates transcription by the recruitment of corepressors and histone modifying complexes or by competing with transcriptional activators for HRE binding.
One question is how HIF-1 mediates transcriptional activation and inhibition through the IDE. The ftn-1, ftn-2 and smf-3 IDEs differ in number, spacing and orientation of the GATA and HIF-1 binding sites. It is likely that architecture of the IDE dictates physical interactions of ELT-2, HIF-1, coactivators and other transcription factors to activate or repress transcription. Further studies are needed to determine how the structure of the IDE affects HIF-1 transcriptional responses.
HREs can be flanked by transcription factor binding sites, and it is the cooperation of HIF with these transcription factors that enhance transcription or direct cell specific expression [11]. The GATA binding sites flanking the HREs in ftn-1, ftn-2 and smf-3 are essential for intestinal expression because mutations of these sites or depletion of ELT-2 reduces intestinal expression of ftn-1 and smf-3 GFP transcriptional reporters [24] (preliminary data, SJR and EAL). Computational studies have shown that the majority of intestinal specific genes contain GATA binding sequences, leading to the notion that ELT2 is a global regulator of intestinal gene expression [50], [51]. Several studies have shown that other transcription factors cooperate with ELT-2 to modulate its function in response to nutritional or physiological signals [52]–[56].
Based on our findings, a model for HIF-1 regulation of intestinal iron homeostasis is proposed (Figure 7). During iron sufficiency, ELT-2 binds to GATA binding sites in the IDE to activate intestinal expression of ftn-1 and ftn-2. Both GATA binding sites are required for ftn-1 expression as deletion of either site abolished expression of an ftn-1 GFP transcriptional reporter [24]. In addition, mutation of all three HREs in the ftn-1 IDE abolished GFP reporter expression, suggesting that a transcriptional activator may bind to the HREs enhancing ELT-2 function [24]. This activator may be a member of the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH/PAS) family or a bHLH transcriptional activator that binds to noncanonical E-box elements [57]–[59]. smf-3 transcription is reduced during iron sufficiency due to decreased HIF-1α levels. Our data also show that a small amount of HIF-1 is expressed during normal growth conditions that can interact with HREs in ftn-1 and smf-3. During iron deficiency, HIF-1 is stabilized and transported to the nucleus where it dimerizes with AHA-1. We propose that HIF-1/AHA-1 competes with a transcriptional activator for binding to the ftn-1 and ftn-2 HREs, inhibiting ftn-1 and ftn-2 transcription. HIF-1/AHA-1 binds to the smf-3 HREs, recruits coactivators and cooperates with ELT-2 to activate transcription.
SMF-1, SMF-2 and SMF-3 have been characterized with regard to their role in Mn2+ homeostasis and sensitivity [28], [30]. SMF-1 and SMF-3 are localized to the apical intestinal epithelium consistent with a role in metal uptake [28], [30], whereas SMF-2 is primarily expressed in pharyngeal epithelium [28], [29]. SMF-1 and SMF-2 are also expressed in dopaminergic neurons where they mediate sensitivity of neurons to Mn and neurotoxins [29]. The high homology of SMF-3 with mammalian DMT1, its localization in the apical membrane of intestinal cells [28], [30], its regulation by iron and a reduction in total iron content in smf-3(ok1035) mutant animals indicate a role for SMF-3 is intestinal iron transport in C. elegans. The regulation of iron homeostasis by HIF-1 provides a mechanism to ensure that C. elegans maintain sufficient iron stores for growth and survival when iron is limiting.
Materials and Methods
C. elegans strains and culture
Strains were cultivated on nematode growth medium (NGM) agar plates seeded with Escherichia coli OP50 at 20–22°C. For iron chelation experiments, synchronized larvae were grown for 24 h on NGM plates then transferred to NGM plates supplemented with 100 uM 2,2′-dipyridyl (BP) for 18 h unless indicated. For iron experiments, larvae were grown for 18 h on NGM plates supplemented with 6.6 mg/ml ferric ammonium citrate (FAC). The pH of FAC-supplemented NGM agar was adjusted to pH 7.0.
The strains provided by C. elegans Genetics Center are: wild-type Bristol N2, vhl-1 (ok161) [13], hif-1 (ia04) [14], RB1491 smf-1(ok1748), VC171 smf-2(gk133) and RB1074 smf-3(ok1035). XA6900 pha-1(e2123ts) III; qaEx1 [ftn-1::Δpes-10::GFP-his, pha-1+] and XA6901 lin-15(n765ts) X; qaEx2 [ftn-2::Δpes-10::GFP-his, lin-15+] were previously described (Romney et al., 2008). Strains generated in this study are: XA6904 pha-1 (e2123ts) III; qaEx04 [smf-3(-1500)::Δpes-10::GFP-his, pha-1+] and XA6905 pha-1(e2123ts) III; qaEx05 [smf-3(-250)::Δpes-10::GFP-his, pha-1+].
Reporter constructs and transgenic lines
smf-3(-1500)::GFP-his and smf-3(-250)::GFP-his were generated by PCR amplification of sequences 1500 nt or 250 nt, respectively, upstream from the initiation ATG of smf-3 (Y69A2AR.4) using primers containing SalI and NheI restriction sites on the 5′ and 3′ termini, respectively. The PCR products were cloned into TOPO Zeroblunt (Invitrogen) followed by digestion and insertion into the SalI and NheI sites of pAP.10. Transgenic strains were made according to standard microinjection procedures. Plasmids B696 (smf-3(-1500)::GFP-his) and B698 (smf-3(-250)::GFP-his) were each co-injected (20 ng/ul) with selection plasmid pBX-1(100 ng/ul). Transgenic worms were recovered after growth at 20–22°C.
RNAi
RNAi clones against ftn-1 (C54F6.14) and ftn-2 (D1037.3) were from the ORFeome-based RNAi library [60] and hif-1 (F38A6.3) was from the Ahringer feeding library [61]. Empty vector (L4400) was used as a control. Worms were grown on RNAi plates (NGM containing 1 mM IPTG and 50 ug/ml ampicillin) seeded with bacteria expressing dsRNA corresponding to ftn-1and ftn-2, hif-1 or L4400.
Rescue
Mixed-stage populations of N2 wildtype and hif-1(ia04) animals containing gravid adults were transferred to RNAi plates seeded with bacteria expressing ftn-1 and ftn-2 dsRNA or empty vector control (L4400) for 24 h at 20–22°C. Synchronized larval stage (L1) worms were obtained by treating RNAi fed gravid adults with alkaline hypochlorite and allowing eggs to hatch overnight in sterile S-basal media. L1 larvae were spotted on ftn-1 and ftn-2 or L4400 RNAi plates supplemented with or without 20 µM BP and incubated at 20–22°C for 48 h prior to scoring for larval stage using a Leica MZ9.5 stereomicroscope.
C. elegans sorting
ftn-1::GFP-his, ftn-2::GFP-his, smf-3(-1500)::GFP-his and smf-3(-250)::GFP-his reporter lines were synchronized by treating gravid adults with alkaline hypochlorite followed by hatching eggs in S-basal medium (0.1 M NaCl, 0.05 M potassium phosphate, pH 6.0, 5 ug/ml cholesterol) overnight. Synchronized L1 worms were grown on control or hif-1 RNAi plates for 32 h. Worms were then rinsed from the plates and washed in M9 buffer (22 mM KH2PO4, 42 mM Na2HPO4, 86 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgSO4) and spotted onto fresh 10 cm control or hif-1 RNAi plates supplemented with 100 µM BP and grown for 18 h. Worms were rinsed from plates and washed with MT buffer (M9 buffer containing 0.1% Triton X-100) by repeated rounds of centrifugation until free of debris. Worms were analyzed using the COPAS Biosort (Union Biometrica, Somerville, MA) as described [24]. Prior to data acquisition, gating parameters were established by visualizing a sorted population by microscopy. The same gating parameters were used for all experimental conditions during GFP fluorescence acquisition and subsequent analysis. Data were analyzed using FCS Express Version 3.0 lite (De Novo Software, Ontario, Canada). Procedures for sorting non-RNAi-treated worms was the same as above except that synchronized L1 stage worms were grown on NGM plates seeded with OP50 for 32 h prior to being transferred to fresh NGM plates and NGM plates supplemented with either 100 uM BP, 100 uM FAC, 100 uM BP plus100 uM MnCl2 or 100 uM BP plus 100 uM FAC. Worms were grown for an additional 18 h prior to data acquisition as performed above.
Microscopy
Images of GFP expression were captured using an Axio Imager (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc, Thornwood NY) outfitted with the Zeiss filter set 38HE (BP 470/40HE, dichroic FT 495 HE, BP 525/50 HE) and an AxioCam HRm camera (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc, Thornwood NY) using AxioVision software. Following acquisition, images were rotated, cropped and sized using Adobe Photoshop.
Western blotting
Mixed-stage populations of N2, hif-1(ia04) and vhl-1(ok161) animals were transferred from NGM plates to fresh NGM and 100 uM BP supplemented plates for 16 hr prior to harvesting. Worms were collected, washed with ddH2O and resuspended in 200 µl lysis buffer (20 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 25 mM KCl, 0.5% NP-40). Worms were sonicated twice using a Misonix 3000 (8 pulses, output 3), centrifuged and the protein concentration of the clarified lysate was determined using Coomassie Plus protein assay reagent (Thermo). Samples (20 ug) were fractionated on a NuPAGE 4–12% Bis-Tris gel (Invitrogen) and western blotting was carried out using rabbit CeHIF-1 antibody at (1∶5,000) [14] (a gift from Dr. Peter Ratcliffe, Oxford) followed by incubation with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies. Proteins were visualized using Western Lighting Chemiluminescence Reagent Plus (PerkinElmer Life Sciences).
RT–PCR
Synchronized L1 larvae were grown on NGM plates seeded with OP50 for 48 h prior to harvest. For iron chelation experiments, synchronized worms were transferred to new NGM plates or NGM plates supplemented with 100 uM BP after 32 h and harvested at 48 h. At harvest, worms were washed from plates and cleaned by repeated rounds of centrifugation and resuspension in ddH2O. Pelleted worms were resuspended in TRIZOL (Invitrogen) and total RNA was purified according to manufacturer's protocol. cDNA was synthesized using 1 ug of purified total RNA using SuperscriptIII Supermix for qRT-PCR (Invitrogen). Semiquantitative RT-PCR (sqRT-PCR) was performed using Recombinant Taq Polymerase (Invitrogen). PCR products were run on ethidium bromide stained 1.2% agarose gels. Images were captured on a FluorChem IS-8900 (Alpha Innotech) and analyzed using ImageQuaNT (Molecular Dynamics) and ImageJ. Primer sequences are shown in Table S1.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)
ChIP assays were performed as previously described [62]. Mixed-stage vhl-1 (ok161) and hif-1 (ia04) worms were grown on two 150 mm NGM plates and harvested. Worm pellets were homogenized in crosslinking buffer (1% formaldehyde in PBS) and incubated for 20 min at room temperature. The reactions were quenched with glycine for 20 min and snap frozen. The frozen pellets were resuspended in HLB buffer (50 mM HEPES-KOH, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 1% Triton-X100, 0.1% SDS, 1 mM PMSF) containing protease inhibitor cocktail (Calbiochem), sonicated and the supernatants were precleared using 30 ul salmon sperm DNA/protein A agarose beads. After centrifugation, 10% of each supernatant was kept as input, while the remaining supernatants were incubated with CeHIF antibody (4 ul) overnight at 4°C. DNA-protein antibody complexes were incubated with Protein A agarose (30 ul slurry) for 2 h at 4°C, and the beads were then resuspended in proteinase K buffer (20 mg/ml proteinase K) and incubated at 45°C for 2 h. The samples were further incubated at 65°C overnight to reverse crosslinks. DNA was purified using a QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen) according to manufacturer's protocol. Quantitative (q) PCR was then performed using Sybr Green mix (Invitrogen) run on an ABI 7000 Sequence Detection System and additionally visualized by 2% ethidium bromide stained agarose gels. Primers flanking the ftn-1 IDE and control primers within the ftn-1 coding region are shown in Table S1.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA)
Wildtype IDE and IDE containing mutations in the three HRE binding sites (HRE3m) (CACGTAGC>ACATGCTA) were excised from TopoZero blunt (Invitrogen) with EcoRI and gel purified. Wildtype IDE was radiolabeled with 50 µCi of 32P[α-dATP] using Klenow DNA polymerase. HIF-1 and AHA-1 were synthesized in TNT SP6 Quick Coupled Transcription/Translation system (Promega) using hif-1 (pSP64-HIF-1) and aha-1 (pJ343) [12]. pSP64-HIF-1 was generated by excision of hif-1 cDNA from pR33 [13] and insertion into pSP64 (Promega). EMSA reactions (20 µl) were performed in reaction buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 4% glycerol, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT) containing 32P-labeled wildtype or HRE3m probes (0.4–1 ng), poly dI-dC (80 ng) and HIF-1 and/or AHA-1 (1–4 µl) at room temperature for 30 min. CeHIF-1 antibody (2 ul) was added during the last 5 min of the binding reactions. For competition experiments, unlabeled IDE or HRE3m DNA (10–100× molar amounts) was added to the reactions 5 min before addition of 32P-labeled probes. Samples were fractionated on a 5% non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel (37.5∶1 acrylamide∶bis).
Metal content by inductively-coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP)
Synchronized L1 worms were obtained by treating gravid adults from each strain with alkaline hypochlorite followed by hatching eggs in S-basal medium overnight. L1 worms were grown on OP-50 seeded NGM plates. L4 worms were washed extensively with M9 buffer and incubated in M9 buffer for 30 min at room temperature to allow for purging of the gut followed by two rinses with ddH2O. Empty tubes were run in parallel to serve as controls. Samples were pelleted and frozen at −80C°. Samples and controls were brought up in 200 ul of metal free 40% nitric acid (Optima) and heated to 95°C for 2 min in a heating block. Solubilized samples were diluted to a final nitric acid concentration of 10% with ddH2O and measured on an Optima 3000 XL ICP-OES (Perkin Elmer). Serial dilutions of commercially available mixed metal standards were used to calibrate the instrument. Results were normalized to the simultaneously acquired signal for sulfur for each sample [63]. The data are presented as a percentage of N2 wildtype animals. At least three independent biological replicates were performed.
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as the means ± SEM. Two-tailed unpaired Student's t test were used for statistical analysis. Data are considered statistically significant at p<0.05.
Supporting Information
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Štítky
Genetika Reprodukčná medicínaČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2011 Číslo 12
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