[HTML][HTML] The transcription factor NF-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2): a protooncogene?

P Shelton, AK Jaiswal�- The FASEB Journal, 2013 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
P Shelton, AK Jaiswal
The FASEB Journal, 2013ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The transcription factor Nrf2 is responsible for regulating a battery of antioxidant and cellular
protective genes, primarily in response to oxidative stress. A member of the cap'n'collar
family of transcription factors, Nrf2 activation is tightly controlled by a series of signaling
events. These events can be separated into the basal state, a preinduction response, gene
induction, and finally a postinduction response, culminating in the restoration of redox
homeostasis. However, despite the immensely intricate level of control the cellular�…
Abstract
The transcription factor Nrf2 is responsible for regulating a battery of antioxidant and cellular protective genes, primarily in response to oxidative stress. A member of the cap'n'collar family of transcription factors, Nrf2 activation is tightly controlled by a series of signaling events. These events can be separated into the basal state, a preinduction response, gene induction, and finally a postinduction response, culminating in the restoration of redox homeostasis. However, despite the immensely intricate level of control the cellular environment imposes on Nrf2 activity, there are many opportunities for perturbations to arise in the signaling events that favor carcinogenesis and, therefore, implicate Nrf2 as both a tumor suppressor and a protooncogene. Herein, we highlight the ways in which Nrf2 is regulated, and discuss some of the Nrf2-inducible antioxidant (NQO1, NQO2, HO-1, GCLC), antiapoptotic (Bcl-2), metabolic (G6PD, TKT, PPARγ), and drug efflux transporter (ABCG2, MRP3, MRP4) genes. In addition, we focus on how Nrf2 functions as a tumor suppressor under normal conditions and how its ability to detoxify the cellular environment makes it an attractive target for other oncogenes either via stabilization or degradation of the transcription factor. Finally, we discuss some of the ways in which Nrf2 is being considered as a therapeutic target for cancer treatment.—Shelton, P., Jaiswal, AK The transcription factor NF-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2): a protooncogene?
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov