| Literature DB >> 30926358 |
Lara Valiño-Rivas1, Juan José Vaquero2, David Sucunza2, Sara Gutierrez2, Ana B Sanz1, Manuel Fresno3, Alberto Ortiz4, Maria Dolores Sanchez-Niño5.
Abstract
NF-κB-inducing kinase (NIK, MAP3K14) is best known as the apical kinase that triggers non-canonical NF-κB activation and by its role in the immune system. Recent data indicate a role for NIK expressed by non-lymphoid cells in cancer, kidney disease, liver injury, glucose homeostasis, osteosarcopenia, vascular calcification, hematopoiesis, and endothelial function. The spectrum of NIK-associated disease now ranges from immunodeficiency (when NIK is defective) to autoimmunity, cancer, sterile inflammation, fibrosis, and metabolic disease when NIK is overactive. The development of novel small-molecule NIK inhibitors has paved the way to test NIK targeting to treat disease in vivo, and may eventually lead to NIK targeting in the clinic. In addition, NIK activators are being explored for specific conditions such as myeloid leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: MAP3K14; NIK; TWEAK; acute kidney injury; apoptosis; autoimmunity; cell death; chronic kidney disease; cirrhosis; diabetes; epigenetic; esteatohepatitis; hepatitis; inflammation; mantle lymphoma; myeloid leukemia; osteoporosis; sarcopenia; verteporfin
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30926358 DOI: 10.1016/j.molmed.2019.02.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Mol Med ISSN: 1471-4914 Impact factor: 11.951