Abstract

Nrf2 regulates the expression of genes encoding antioxidant proteins involved in cellular redox homeostasis. Previous studies have suggested that activation of Nrf2 is mediated by mechanisms promoting its dissociation from Keap1, a cytosolic repressor that acts to sequester the transcription factor in the cytoplasm. As a short-lived protein, Nrf2 is also activated by mechanisms leading to its stabilization in cells under stress, and recent evidence indicates that Keap1 has an active role in the control of its stability. In this report, using immunocytochemistry, cell fractionation, and chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses, we found that Nrf2 is primarily a nuclear protein and that it is expressed and recruited to the chromatin constitutively to drive basal gene expression. Furthermore, we found evidence indicating that Keap1 may repress Nrf2 activity by transiently shuttling into the nucleus to promote its ubiquitylation. The data suggested that the steady-state level of Nrf2 is maintained by a dynamic pathway that balances its constitutive expression with a Keap1-regulated degradation process downstream of its role as a transcriptional activator. We suggest that the stabilization of Nrf2 in cells under stress represents the central regulatory response mediated by mechanisms that interfere with its interaction with Keap1, leading to the induction of antioxidant enzymes important to maintain cellular redox homeostasis.

Highlights

  • Nrf2 activates transcription of its genes through binding to the antioxidant-response element (ARE)2 found in the gene promoters

  • We proposed that Nrf2 is part of a gene regulatory pathway mediated by mechanisms that control its stability downstream of its role as a transcriptional activator

  • Nrf2 Is Localized in the Nucleus of HepG2 and H4IIEC3 Hepatoma Cells—The localization of Nrf2 to the cytoplasm previously has been inferred largely from several studies, including those from our laboratory, using an anti-Nrf2 antibody (␣Nrf2-C20, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) raised against a peptide derived from the C terminus of the protein [15,16,17]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nrf2 activates transcription of its genes through binding to the antioxidant-response element (ARE)2 found in the gene promoters. Since the regulation of Nrf2 stability by Keap1 involves a redoxsensitive mechanism, the fact that tBHQ induces Nrf2 stabilization in HepG2 cells [19] (Fig. 1B) indicates that Keap1 is expressed and functionally active in this cell line. We treated cells with LMB to inhibit the activity of the CRM1/exportin pathway and performed ICC using an anti-V5 antibody.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call