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      Antagonism of E2F-1 regulated Bnip3 transcription by NF-kappaB is essential for basal cell survival.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Animals, Cell Death, physiology, Cell Hypoxia, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation, E2F1 Transcription Factor, genetics, metabolism, Gene Knockdown Techniques, Gene Silencing, Humans, Membrane Proteins, Mitochondrial Proteins, NF-kappa B, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Protein Binding, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Retinoblastoma Protein, Signal Transduction, Transcription, Genetic

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          Abstract

          The transcription factor E2F-1 drives proliferation and death, but the mechanisms that differentially regulate these divergent actions are poorly understood. The hypoxia-inducible death factor Bnip3 is an E2F-1 target gene and integral component of the intrinsic mitochondrial death pathway. The mechanisms that govern Bnip3 gene activity remain cryptic. Herein we show that the transcription factor NF-kappaB provides a molecular switch that determines whether E2F-1 signals proliferation or death under physiological conditions. We show under basal nonapoptotic conditions that NF-kappaB constitutively occupies and transcriptionally silences Bnip3 gene transcription by competing with E2F-1 for Bnip3 promoter binding. Conversely, in the absence of NF-kappaB, or during hypoxia when NF-kappaB abundance is reduced, basal Bnip3 gene transcription is activated by the unrestricted binding of E2F-1 to the Bnip3 promoter. Genetic knock-down of E2F-1 or retinoblastoma gene product over-expression in cardiac and human pancreatic cancer cells deficient for NF-kappaB signaling abrogated basal and hypoxia-inducible Bnip3 transcription. The survival kinase PI3K/Akt inhibited Bnip3 expression levels in cells in a manner dependent upon NF-kappaB activation. Hence, by way of example, we show that the transcriptional inhibition of E2F-1-dependent Bnip3 expression by NF-kappaB highlights a survival pathway that overrides the E2F-1 tumor suppressor program. Our data may explain more fundamentally how cells, by selectively inhibiting E2F-1-dependent death gene transcription, avert apoptosis down-stream of the retinoblastoma/E2F-1 cell cycle pathway.

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