| Literature DB >> 28736239 |
Marcus John Long1, Hong-Yu Lin1, Saba Parvez1, Yi Zhao1, Jesse Richard Poganik1, Paul Huang1, Yimon Aye2.
Abstract
Simultaneous hyperactivation of Wnt and antioxidant response (AR) are often observed during oncogenesis. However, it remains unclear how the β-catenin-driven Wnt and the Nrf2-driven AR mutually regulate each other. The situation is compounded because many players in these two pathways are redox sensors, rendering bolus redox signal-dosing methods uninformative. Herein we examine the ramifications of single-protein target-specific AR upregulation in various knockdown lines. Our data document that Nrf2/AR strongly inhibits β-catenin/Wnt. The magnitude and mechanism of this negative regulation are dependent on the direct interaction between β-catenin N terminus and β-TrCP1 (an antagonist of both Nrf2 and β-catenin), and independent of binding between Nrf2 and β-TrCP1. Intriguingly, β-catenin positively regulates AR. Because AR is a negative regulator of Wnt regardless of β-catenin N terminus, this switch of function is likely sufficient to establish a new Wnt/AR equilibrium during tumorigenesis.Entities:
Keywords: 4-hydroxynonenal; HaloTag; Keap1-Nrf2-antioxidant response; reactive electrophile response; redox signaling; signaling crosstalk; β-TrCP; β-catenin/wnt signaling
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28736239 PMCID: PMC5634333 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2017.06.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Chem Biol ISSN: 2451-9448 Impact factor: 8.116