HIF is a transcription factor that plays an essential role in the cellular response to low oxygen, orchestrating a metabolic switch that allows cells to survive in this environment. In immunity, infected and inflamed tissues are often hypoxic, and HIF helps immune cells adapt. HIF-α stabilization can also occur under normoxia during immunity and inflammation, where it regulates metabolism but in addition can directly regulate expression of immune genes. Here we review the role of HIF in immunity, including its role in macrophages, dendritic cells, neutrophils, T cells, and B cells. Its role in immunity is as essential for cellular responses as it is in its original role in hypoxia, with HIF being implicated in multiple inflammatory diseases and in immunosuppression in tumors.
Robert N. Jones, Kate E. McDonald, Joseph Willson, Bart Ghesquière, David Sammut, Eleni Daniel, A.J. Harris, Amy Lewis, A. A. Roger Thompson, Rebecca Dickinson, Tracie Plant, Fiona Murphy, Pranvera Sadiku, Brian Keevil, Peter Carmeliet, Moira K. B. Whyte, John Newell‐Price, Sarah R. Walmsley
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