Abstract

The membrane-bound transcription factor Nrf1 (encoded by Nfe2l1) is activated by sensing glucose deprivation, cholesterol abundance, proteasomal inhibition and oxidative stress and then mediates distinct signaling responses to maintain cellular homeostasis. Herein, we found that Nrf1 stability and transactivity are both enhanced by USP19, a ubiquitin-specific protease tail-anchored in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through its C-terminal transmembrane domain. Further experiments revealed that USP19 directly interacts with Nrf1 in proximity to the ER and topologically acts as a deubiquitinating enzyme to remove ubiquitin moieties from this protein, which allow it to circumvent potential proteasomal degradation. This USP19-mediated effect takes place only after Nrf1 is retro-translocated by p97 out of the ER membrane to dislocate the cytoplasmic side. Conversely, knockout of USP19 causes significant decreases in the abundance of Nrf1 and the entrance of its active isoform into the nucleus, which result in the downregulation of its target proteasomal subunits and a modest reduction in USP19−/−-derived tumor growth in xenograft mice when compared with wild-type controls. Altogether, these results demonstrate that USP19 serves as a novel mechanistic modulator of Nrf1, but not Nrf2, thereby enabling Nrf1 to be rescued from the putative ubiquitin-directed ER-associated degradation pathway. In turn, our additional experimental evidence has revealed that transcriptional expression of endogenous USP19 and its promoter-driven reporter genes is differentially regulated by Nrf2, as well by Nrf1, at distinct layers within a complex hierarchical regulatory network.

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