HILPS , a long noncoding RNA essential for global oxygen sensing in humans

Author:

Chen Zhi12ORCID,Chen Chan12,Xiao Lei3ORCID,Tu Rongfu4,Yu Miaomiao2ORCID,Wang Donghai2ORCID,Kang Wenqian2,Han Meng5,Huang Hao2,Liu Hudan2ORCID,Zhao Bing3ORCID,Qing Guoliang126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology, Medical Research Institute, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, China.

2. Frontier Science Center for Immunology and Metabolism, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, China.

3. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200438, China.

4. Department of Cancer Precision Medicine, The MED-X Institute, The First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710000, China.

5. Protein Chemistry and Proteomics Facility, Tsinghua University Technology Center for Protein Research, Beijing 100084, China.

6. Taikang Center for Life and Medical Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, China.

Abstract

Adaptation to low levels of oxygen (hypoxia) is a universal biological feature across metazoans. However, the unique mechanisms how different species sense oxygen deprivation remain unresolved. Here, we functionally characterize a novel long noncoding RNA (lncRNA), LOC105369301 , which we termed hypoxia-induced lncRNA for polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) stabilization ( HILPS ). HILPS exhibits appreciable basal expression exclusively in a wide variety of human normal and cancer cells and is robustly induced by hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF1α). HILPS binds to PLK1 and sequesters it from proteasomal degradation. Stabilized PLK1 directly phosphorylates HIF1α and enhances its stability, constituting a positive feed-forward circuit that reinforces oxygen sensing by HIF1α. HILPS depletion triggers catastrophic adaptation defect during hypoxia in both normal and cancer cells. These findings introduce a mechanism that underlies the HIF1α identity deeply interconnected with PLK1 integrity and identify the HILPS -PLK1-HIF1α pathway as a unique oxygen-sensing axis in the regulation of human physiological and pathogenic processes.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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