The Role of Nrf2 signaling in cancer stem cells: From stemness and self-renewal to tumorigenesis and chemoresistance

H Kahroba, M Shirmohamadi, MS Hejazi, N Samadi - Life sciences, 2019 - Elsevier
Life sciences, 2019Elsevier
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are subpopulation of tumor mass with exclusive abilities in self-
renewing, stemness maintaining, and differentiation into the various non-stem cancer cells
to provoke tumorigenesis, metastasis dissemination, drug-resistant, and cancer recurrence.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) impair cellular function by oxidizing cell components
containing proteins, lipids, and DNA. Tumor oxidant status is elevated due to high metabolic
activity under influence of abnormal growth factors, cytokines and function ROS-producing …
Abstract
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are subpopulation of tumor mass with exclusive abilities in self-renewing, stemness maintaining, and differentiation into the various non-stem cancer cells to provoke tumorigenesis, metastasis dissemination, drug-resistant, and cancer recurrence. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) impair cellular function by oxidizing cell components containing proteins, lipids, and DNA. Tumor oxidant status is elevated due to high metabolic activity under influence of abnormal growth factors, cytokines and function ROS-producing enzymes, including nitric oxide synthases, cyclooxygenases, and lipoxygenases. Nuclear factor-erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2) is a transcriptional master regulator element which is believed to recognize cellular oxidative stress followed by binding to promoter of cyto-protective and anti-oxidative genes to maintain cellular redox status through promoting antioxidant response participants (glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, thioredoxin reductase, ferritin, NADPH: quinone oxidoreductase 1). However, Nrf2 signaling protects malignant cells from ROS damage against tumor growth and chemoresistance. In addition, Nrf2 is able to participate in differentiation of certain stem cells by modulating autophagy procedure, also NRF2 provokes DNA damage response and facilitates drug metabolism and drug resistance by controlling of downstream enzyme and transporter members. In this review, we discuss the role of NRF2 in stemness, self-renewal ability, tumorigenesis and chemoresistance of CSCs.
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