The injury response is a complex set of events, which represents the reaction of a biological system to a perceived change in its environment in an attempt to maintain system integrity. Isolation of individual events or components of this response cannot describe the overall process, but may reflect general mechanisms that have evolved over time to solve the complex requirements of the injury response. The process, generally termed the acute phase response, is a series of organ-specific responses that begin shortly after a systemic injury. In the liver, this response involves both dramatic inductions and reductions in specific sets of genes, and an overall widespread global change in proteins produced. This can be thought of as a phenotypic change or ‘reprogramming’ of the liver. These changes in protein production are modulated and regulated at the level of transcription and involve significant manipulations of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF-4) is a liver enriched transcription factor that regulates a large number of liver-specific genes, which play important roles in the critical pathways modulated by the response to injury. HNF-4 also performs an essential role in overall development and is critical for the normal expression of multiple genes in the developed liver, as well as being upstream of HNF-1 in a transcriptional hierarchy that drives hepatocyte differentiation. The role of HNF-4 in regulating liver-specific transcriptional changes directed by injury remains to be defined. In our cell-culture and whole-animal models, we demonstrate that the binding activity of HNF-4 decreases quickly after injury due to post-translational modification by phosphorylation. The mechanisms by which HNF-4 is modified after injury involve the activation of Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) signal transduction pathways, but the direct or indirect interaction of JAK2 with HNF-4 remains to be defined.
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November 2002
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Research Article|
November 15 2002
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 response to injury involves a rapid decrease in DNA binding and transactivation via a JAK2 signal transduction pathway Available to Purchase
Xuemei LI;
Xuemei LI
∗Boston Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Boston, MA 02118, U.S.A.,
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John SALISBURY-ROWSWELL;
John SALISBURY-ROWSWELL
∗Boston Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Boston, MA 02118, U.S.A.,
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Alan D. MURDOCK;
Alan D. MURDOCK
∗Boston Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Boston, MA 02118, U.S.A.,
†United States Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright—Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, OH 45433, U.S.A.
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R. Armour FORSE;
R. Armour FORSE
∗Boston Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Boston, MA 02118, U.S.A.,
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Peter A. BURKE
Peter A. BURKE
1
∗Boston Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Boston, MA 02118, U.S.A.,
1To whom correspondence should be addressed (e-mail [email protected]).
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Received:
February 07 2002
Revision Received:
June 17 2002
Accepted:
July 10 2002
Accepted Manuscript online:
July 10 2002
Online ISSN: 1470-8728
Print ISSN: 0264-6021
The Biochemical Society, London ©2002
2002
Biochem J (2002) 368 (1): 203–211.
Article history
Received:
February 07 2002
Revision Received:
June 17 2002
Accepted:
July 10 2002
Accepted Manuscript online:
July 10 2002
Citation
Xuemei LI, John SALISBURY-ROWSWELL, Alan D. MURDOCK, R. Armour FORSE, Peter A. BURKE; Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 response to injury involves a rapid decrease in DNA binding and transactivation via a JAK2 signal transduction pathway. Biochem J 15 November 2002; 368 (1): 203–211. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj20020233
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