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Gene Expression

Coordinate Transcriptional and Translational Regulation of Ferritin in Response to Oxidative Stress

, , , , &
Pages 5818-5827 | Received 02 Feb 2000, Accepted 18 May 2000, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The global increase in transcription of cytoprotective genes induced in response to oxidative challenge has been termed the antioxidant response. Ferritin serves as the major iron-binding protein in nonhematopoietic tissues, limiting the catalytic availability of iron for participation in oxygen radical generation. Here we demonstrate that ferritin is a participant in the antioxidant response through a genetically defined electrophile response element (EpRE). The EpRE of ferritin H identified in this report exhibits sequence similarity to EpRE motifs found in antioxidant response genes such as those encoding NAD(P)H:quinone reductase, glutathioneS-transferase, and heme oxygenase. However, the EpRE of ferritin H is unusual in structure, comprising two bidirectional motifs arranged in opposing directions on complementary DNA strands. In addition to EpRE-mediated transcriptional activation, we demonstrate that ferritin is subject to time-dependent translational control through regulation of iron-regulatory proteins (IRP). Although IRP-1 is initially activated to its RNA binding (ferritin-repressing) state by oxidants, it rapidly returns to its basal state. This permits the translation of newly synthesized ferritin transcripts and ultimately leads to increased levels of ferritin protein synthesis following oxidant exposure. Taken together, these results clarify the complex transcriptional and translational regulatory mechanisms that contribute to ferritin regulation in response to prooxidant stress and establish a role for ferritin in the antioxidant response.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to Elizabeth Theil and Yaohuang Ke for detailed advice on IRP binding assays.

This work was supported by grants DK-42412 and DK42412-09S1 (to S.P.W.) from the National Institutes of Health. Phosphoimaging analysis was performed in a facility supported by grant CA12197 from the National Institutes of Health and grant 9510-IDG-1006 from the North Carolina Biotechnology Center.

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