Z-REX uncovers a bifurcation in function of Keap1 paralogs

Alexandra Van Hall‐Beauvais(École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne), Jesse R. Poganik(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Kuan‐Ting Huang(École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne), Saba Parvez(University of Utah), Yi Zhao(Shenzhen Bay Laboratory), Hongyu Lin(Xiamen University), Xuyu Liu(The University of Sydney), Marcus J. C. Long(University of Lausanne), Yimon Aye(École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)
eLife
October 27, 2022
Cited by 14Open Access
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Abstract

Studying electrophile signaling is marred by difficulties in parsing changes in pathway flux attributable to on-target, vis-à-vis off-target, modifications. By combining bolus dosing, knockdown, and Z-REX—a tool investigating on-target/on-pathway electrophile signaling, we document that electrophile labeling of one zebrafish-Keap1-paralog (zKeap1b) stimulates Nrf2- driven antioxidant response (AR) signaling (like the human-ortholog). Conversely, zKeap1a is a dominant-negative regulator of electrophile-promoted Nrf2-signaling, and itself is nonpermissive for electrophile-induced Nrf2-upregulation. This behavior is recapitulated in human cells: (1) zKeap1b-expressing cells are permissive for augmented AR-signaling through reduced zKeap1b–Nrf2 binding following whole-cell electrophile treatment; (2) zKeap1a-expressing cells are non-permissive for AR-upregulation, as zKeap1a–Nrf2 binding capacity remains unaltered upon whole-cell electrophile exposure; (3) 1:1 ZKeap1a:zKeap1b-co-expressing cells show no Nrf2-release from the Keap1-complex following whole-cell electrophile administration, rendering these cells unable to upregulate AR. We identified a zKeap1a-specific point-mutation (C273I) responsible for zKeap1a’s behavior during electrophilic stress. Human-Keap1(C273I), of known diminished Nrf2-regulatory capacity, dominantly muted electrophile-induced Nrf2-signaling. These studies highlight divergent and interdependent electrophile signaling behaviors, despite conserved electrophile sensing .


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