Cell Death and Disease (May 2022)

Dysfunction of the energy sensor NFE2L1 triggers uncontrollable AMPK signaling and glucose metabolism reprogramming

  • Lu Qiu,
  • Qiufang Yang,
  • Wenshan Zhao,
  • Yadi Xing,
  • Peng Li,
  • Xiaowen Zhou,
  • Haoming Ning,
  • Ranran Shi,
  • Shanshan Gou,
  • Yalan Chen,
  • Wenjie Zhai,
  • Yahong Wu,
  • Guodong Li,
  • Zhenzhen Chen,
  • Yonggang Ren,
  • Yanfeng Gao,
  • Yiguo Zhang,
  • Yuanming Qi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-022-04917-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The antioxidant transcription factor NFE2L1 (also called Nrf1) acts as a core regulator of redox signaling and metabolism homeostasis, and thus, its dysfunction results in multiple systemic metabolic diseases. However, the molecular mechanism(s) by which NFE2L1 regulates glycose and lipid metabolism remains elusive. Here, we found that loss of NFE2L1 in human HepG2 cells led to a lethal phenotype upon glucose deprivation and NFE2L1 deficiency could affect the uptake of glucose. Further experiments revealed that glycosylation of NFE2L1 enabled it to sense the energy state. These results indicated that NFE2L1 can serve as a dual sensor and regulator of glucose homeostasis. The transcriptome, metabolome, and seahorse data further revealed that disruption of NFE2L1 could reprogram glucose metabolism to aggravate the Warburg effect in NFE2L1-silenced hepatoma cells, concomitant with mitochondrial damage. Co-expression and Co-immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that NFE2L1 could directly interact and inhibit AMPK. Collectively, NFE2L1 functioned as an energy sensor and negatively regulated AMPK signaling through directly interacting with AMPK. The novel NFE2L1/AMPK signaling pathway delineate the mechanism underlying of NFE2L1-related metabolic diseases and highlight the crosstalk between redox homeostasis and metabolism homeostasis.