Hypoxia induces angiogenesis, partly through stabilization of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha), leading to transcription of pro-angiogenic factors. Here we examined the regulation of HIF-1alpha by hypoxia and nitric oxide (NO) in explants of human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells. Cells were treated with NO donors under normoxic or hypoxic (2% O2) conditions, followed by analysis of HIF-1alpha protein levels. Treatment with the NO donor sodium nitroprusside reduced levels of HIF-1alpha, whereas NO donors, NOC-18 and S-nitrosoglutathione, increased HIF-1alpha levels. SIN-1, which releases both NO and superoxide (O2*-), reduced HIF-1alpha levels, suggesting that inhibitory NO donors may elicit effects through peroxynitrite (ONOO*-). O2*- generation by xanthine/xanthine oxidase also reduced HIF-1alpha levels, confirming an inhibitory role for reactive oxygen species (ROS). Furthermore, superoxide dismutase increased HIF-1alpha levels, and the NO scavenger carboxy-PTIO reversed HIF-1alpha stabilization by NO donors. Effects on HIF-1alpha levels correlated with vascular endothelial growth factor transcription but did not affect HIF-1alpha transcription, as measured by RT-PCR and luciferase-reporter assays. The results indicate that HIF-1alpha is stabilized by agents that produce NO and reduce ROS but destabilized by agents that increase ROS, including O2*- and ONOO*-. Thus we propose that the effect of NO on HIF-1alpha signaling is critically dependent on the form of NO and the physiological environment of the responding cell.
Conditional logistic regression matched by sex, age, β-globin genotype, and "ever"/"never" on hydroxyurea. Mutant: presence of one or more copies of the alternative allele. † APOL1 G1/G2 heterozygotes defined as rs71785313="TTATAA/-" and rs6090145="AG" or rs71785313="TTATAA/-" and rs73885319="AG". ‡ APOL1 G1/G2 Risk Model-defined risk variant as G1 or G2 homozygotes or G1/G2 heterozygotes.
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