Tissue-specific response of the RB-E2F1 complex during mammalian hibernation.
Gurjit SinghTighe BloskieKenneth B StoreyPublished in: Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology (2022)
Metabolic rate depression during prolonged bouts of torpor is characteristic of mammalian hibernation, reducing energy expenditures over the winter. Cell cycle arrest is observed in quiescent cells during dormancy, partly due to the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein at G 1 /S, given cell division and proliferation are metabolic-costly processes. Rb binds to E2F transcription factors and recruits corepressors (e.g., SUV39H1) to E2F target genes, blocking their transcription and cell cycle passage. Phosphorylation by cyclin-CDK complexes at S780 or S795 abolishes Rb-mediated repression, allowing transition into S phase. The present study compares Rb-E2F1 responses between euthermic and torpid states in five organs (brain, heart, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle) of 13-lined ground squirrels (Ictidomys tridecemlineatus). Immunoblotting assessed the expression of Rb, pRb (S780, S795), E2F1, and SUV39H1. Our findings demonstrate multi-tissue upregulation of Rb and SUV39H1 during torpor, with tissue-specific changes to E2F1 and pRb (S780), suggesting Rb-E2F1 contributes to cell cycle control in hibernation.