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Antagonism of E2F-1 regulated Bnip3 transcription by NF-κB is essential for basal cell survival
Author(s) -
James Shaw,
Natalia Yurkova,
Tong Zhang,
Hongying Gang,
Floribeth Aguilar,
Danielle R. Weidman,
Carly Scramstad,
H. Weisman,
Lorrie A. Kirshenbaum
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.0807735105
Subject(s) - e2f , transcription factor , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , retinoblastoma protein , transcription (linguistics) , programmed cell death , e2f1 , general transcription factor , promoter , gene expression , cancer research , cell cycle , gene , apoptosis , genetics , linguistics , philosophy
The transcription factor E2F-1 drives proliferation and death, but the mechanisms that differentially regulate these divergent actions are poorly understood. The hypoxia-inducible death factor Bnip3 is an E2F-1 target gene and integral component of the intrinsic mitochondrial death pathway. The mechanisms that govern Bnip3 gene activity remain cryptic. Herein we show that the transcription factor NF-kappaB provides a molecular switch that determines whether E2F-1 signals proliferation or death under physiological conditions. We show under basal nonapoptotic conditions that NF-kappaB constitutively occupies and transcriptionally silences Bnip3 gene transcription by competing with E2F-1 for Bnip3 promoter binding. Conversely, in the absence of NF-kappaB, or during hypoxia when NF-kappaB abundance is reduced, basal Bnip3 gene transcription is activated by the unrestricted binding of E2F-1 to the Bnip3 promoter. Genetic knock-down of E2F-1 or retinoblastoma gene product over-expression in cardiac and human pancreatic cancer cells deficient for NF-kappaB signaling abrogated basal and hypoxia-inducible Bnip3 transcription. The survival kinase PI3K/Akt inhibited Bnip3 expression levels in cells in a manner dependent upon NF-kappaB activation. Hence, by way of example, we show that the transcriptional inhibition of E2F-1-dependent Bnip3 expression by NF-kappaB highlights a survival pathway that overrides the E2F-1 tumor suppressor program. Our data may explain more fundamentally how cells, by selectively inhibiting E2F-1-dependent death gene transcription, avert apoptosis down-stream of the retinoblastoma/E2F-1 cell cycle pathway.

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