The Oncogenic Action of NRF2 Depends on De-glycation by Fructosamine-3-Kinase.

Article Details

Citation

Sanghvi VR, Leibold J, Mina M, Mohan P, Berishaj M, Li Z, Miele MM, Lailler N, Zhao C, de Stanchina E, Viale A, Akkari L, Lowe SW, Ciriello G, Hendrickson RC, Wendel HG

The Oncogenic Action of NRF2 Depends on De-glycation by Fructosamine-3-Kinase.

Cell. 2019 Aug 8;178(4):807-819.e21. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.031.

PubMed ID
31398338 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The NRF2 transcription factor controls a cell stress program that is implicated in cancer and there is great interest in targeting NRF2 for therapy. We show that NRF2 activity depends on Fructosamine-3-kinase (FN3K)-a kinase that triggers protein de-glycation. In its absence, NRF2 is extensively glycated, unstable, and defective at binding to small MAF proteins and transcriptional activation. Moreover, the development of hepatocellular carcinoma triggered by MYC and Keap1 inactivation depends on FN3K in vivo. N-acetyl cysteine treatment partially rescues the effects of FN3K loss on NRF2 driven tumor phenotypes indicating a key role for NRF2-mediated redox balance. Mass spectrometry reveals that other proteins undergo FN3K-sensitive glycation, including translation factors, heat shock proteins, and histones. How glycation affects their functions remains to be defined. In summary, our study reveals a surprising role for the glycation of cellular proteins and implicates FN3K as targetable modulator of NRF2 activity in cancer.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2Q16236Details