Nrf2 Drives Hepatocellular Carcinoma Progression through Acetyl-CoA–Mediated Metabolic and Epigenetic Regulatory Networks

Author:

Xi Caixia12ORCID,Pang Junfeng12ORCID,Barrett Amanda3ORCID,Horuzsko Anatolij1ORCID,Ande Satyanarayana1ORCID,Mivechi Nahid F.124ORCID,Zhu Xingguo15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Georgia Cancer Center, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia.

2. 2Molecular Chaperone Biology, Medical College of Georgia, Georgia Cancer Center, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia.

3. 3Department of Pathology, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia.

4. 4Department of Radiation Oncology, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia.

5. 5Department of Pediatrics, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia.

Abstract

Abstract Correlations between the oxidative stress response and metabolic reprogramming have been observed during malignant tumor formation; however, the detailed mechanism remains elusive. The transcription factor Nrf2, a master regulator of the oxidative stress response, mediates metabolic reprogramming in multiple cancers. In a mouse model of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), through metabolic profiling, genome-wide gene expression, and chromatin structure analyses, we present new evidence showing that in addition to altering antioxidative stress response signaling, Nrf2 ablation impairs multiple metabolic pathways to reduce the generation of acetyl-CoA and suppress histone acetylation in tumors, but not in tumor-adjacent normal tissue. Nrf2 ablation and dysregulated histone acetylation impair transcription complex assembly on downstream target antioxidant and metabolic regulatory genes for expression regulation. Mechanistic studies indicate that the regulatory function of Nrf2 is low glucose dependent, the effect of which is demolished under energy refeeding. Together, our results implicate an unexpected effect of Nrf2 on acetyl-CoA generation, in addition to its classic antioxidative stress response regulatory activity, integrates metabolic and epigenetic programs to drive HCC progression. Implications: This study highlights that Nrf2 integrates metabolic and epigenetic regulatory networks to dictate tumor progression and that Nrf2 targeting is therapeutically exploitable in HCC treatment.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology,Molecular Biology

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