Nuclear Factor-κB–Mediated Cell Survival Involves Transcriptional Silencing of the Mitochondrial Death Gene BNIP3 in Ventricular Myocytes

Delphine Baetz(St. Boniface Hospital), Kelly M. Regula(St. Boniface Hospital), Karen Ens(St. Boniface Hospital), James Shaw(St. Boniface Hospital), Shilpa Kothari(St. Boniface Hospital), Natalia Yurkova(St. Boniface Hospital), Lorrie A. Kirshenbaum(St. Boniface Hospital)
Circulation
December 12, 2005
Cited by 99Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: A survival role for the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) in ventricular myocytes has been reported; however, the underlying mechanism is undefined. In this report we provide new mechanistic evidence that survival signals conferred by NF-kappaB impinge on the hypoxia-inducible death factor BNIP3. METHODS AND RESULTS: Activation of the NF-kappaB signaling pathway by IKKbeta in ventricular myocytes suppressed mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP) opening and cell death provoked by BNIP3. Expression of IKKbeta or p65 NF-kappaB suppressed basal and hypoxia-inducible BNIP3 gene activity. Deletion analysis of the BNIP3 promoter revealed the NF-kappaB elements to be crucial for inhibiting basal and inducible BNIP3 gene activity. Cells derived from p65(-/-)-deficient mice or ventricular myocytes rendered defective for NF-kappaB signaling with a nonphosphorylative IkappaB exhibited increased basal BNIP3 gene expression, mitochondrial PTP, and cell death. Genetic or functional ablation of the BNIP3 gene in NF-kappaB-defective myocytes rescued them from mitochondrial defects and cell death. CONCLUSIONS: The data provide new compelling evidence that NF-kappaB suppresses mitochondrial defects and cell death of ventricular myocytes through a mechanism that transcriptionally silences the death gene BNIP3. Collectively, our data provide new mechanistic insight into the mode by which NF-kappaB suppresses cell death and identify BNIP3 as a key transcriptional target for NF-kappaB-regulated expression in ventricular myocytes.


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