PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Renal tubular HIF-2α expression requires VHL inactivation and causes fibrosis and cysts.

  • Ruth E Schietke,
  • Thomas Hackenbeck,
  • Maxine Tran,
  • Regina Günther,
  • Bernd Klanke,
  • Christina L Warnecke,
  • Karl X Knaup,
  • Deepa Shukla,
  • Christian Rosenberger,
  • Robert Koesters,
  • Sebastian Bachmann,
  • Peter Betz,
  • Gunnar Schley,
  • Johannes Schödel,
  • Carsten Willam,
  • Thomas Winkler,
  • Kerstin Amann,
  • Kai-Uwe Eckardt,
  • Patrick Maxwell,
  • Michael S Wiesener

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. e31034

Abstract

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The Hypoxia-inducible transcription Factor (HIF) represents an important adaptive mechanism under hypoxia, whereas sustained activation may also have deleterious effects. HIF activity is determined by the oxygen regulated α-subunits HIF-1α or HIF-2α. Both are regulated by oxygen dependent degradation, which is controlled by the tumor suppressor "von Hippel-Lindau" (VHL), the gatekeeper of renal tubular growth control. HIF appears to play a particular role for the kidney, where renal EPO production, organ preservation from ischemia-reperfusion injury and renal tumorigenesis are prominent examples. Whereas HIF-1α is inducible in physiological renal mouse, rat and human tubular epithelia, HIF-2α is never detected in these cells, in any species. In contrast, distinct early lesions of biallelic VHL inactivation in kidneys of the hereditary VHL syndrome show strong HIF-2α expression. Furthermore, knockout of VHL in the mouse tubular apparatus enables HIF-2α expression. Continuous transgenic expression of HIF-2α by the Ksp-Cadherin promotor leads to renal fibrosis and insufficiency, next to multiple renal cysts. In conclusion, VHL appears to specifically repress HIF-2α in renal epithelia. Unphysiological expression of HIF-2α in tubular epithelia has deleterious effects. Our data are compatible with dedifferentiation of renal epithelial cells by sustained HIF-2α expression. However, HIF-2α overexpression alone is insufficient to induce tumors. Thus, our data bear implications for renal tumorigenesis, epithelial differentiation and renal repair mechanisms.