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The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds

A constitutively downregulated cytoprotective mechanism in response to oxidative stress and its constant companion, inflammation, may exist in clinical and experimental diabetes. The Nrf2 signaling pathway promotes the expression of a plethora of genes that regulate processes involved in protein sta...

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Autor principal: Bitar, Milad S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Landes Bioscience 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3609099/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23700526
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/adip.20235
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author Bitar, Milad S.
author_facet Bitar, Milad S.
author_sort Bitar, Milad S.
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description A constitutively downregulated cytoprotective mechanism in response to oxidative stress and its constant companion, inflammation, may exist in clinical and experimental diabetes. The Nrf2 signaling pathway promotes the expression of a plethora of genes that regulate processes involved in protein stability, proteosome integrity, autophagy, senescence and protection against oxidative stress and inflammation. Nrf2 is held in the cytoplasm as an inactive complex bound to Keap1, which facilitates its ubiquitination. Dissociation of Nrf2 from its repressor Keap1 occurs in response to a stressful insult. Covalent modifications involving phosphorylation or acetylation of the free Nrf2 dictates its nucleocytoplasmic localization and henceforth the transcriptional activity of this pleiotropic protein. Bitar and Al-Mulla recently reported that an enhancement in the GSK-3β-Fyn signaling mechanism in wounds or fibroblasts of type 2 diabetes contributes to the diminution in Nrf2 nuclear accumulation and the concomitant aberration in the expression of Nrf2-dependent phase 2 antioxidant enzymes. This phenomenon was associated with a significant decrease in key fibroblast functions essential for wound healing, including cell migration and contraction. Overall, the authors newly identified defects in the GSK-3β-Fyn-Nrf2 signaling pathway during diabetes that may assist in placing us on the road for an evidence-based therapy of non-healing chronic wounds.
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spelling pubmed-36090992013-05-22 The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds Bitar, Milad S. Adipocyte Commentary A constitutively downregulated cytoprotective mechanism in response to oxidative stress and its constant companion, inflammation, may exist in clinical and experimental diabetes. The Nrf2 signaling pathway promotes the expression of a plethora of genes that regulate processes involved in protein stability, proteosome integrity, autophagy, senescence and protection against oxidative stress and inflammation. Nrf2 is held in the cytoplasm as an inactive complex bound to Keap1, which facilitates its ubiquitination. Dissociation of Nrf2 from its repressor Keap1 occurs in response to a stressful insult. Covalent modifications involving phosphorylation or acetylation of the free Nrf2 dictates its nucleocytoplasmic localization and henceforth the transcriptional activity of this pleiotropic protein. Bitar and Al-Mulla recently reported that an enhancement in the GSK-3β-Fyn signaling mechanism in wounds or fibroblasts of type 2 diabetes contributes to the diminution in Nrf2 nuclear accumulation and the concomitant aberration in the expression of Nrf2-dependent phase 2 antioxidant enzymes. This phenomenon was associated with a significant decrease in key fibroblast functions essential for wound healing, including cell migration and contraction. Overall, the authors newly identified defects in the GSK-3β-Fyn-Nrf2 signaling pathway during diabetes that may assist in placing us on the road for an evidence-based therapy of non-healing chronic wounds. Landes Bioscience 2012-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3609099/ /pubmed/23700526 http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/adip.20235 Text en Copyright © 2012 Landes Bioscience http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Bitar, Milad S.
The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title_full The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title_fullStr The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title_full_unstemmed The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title_short The GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: On the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
title_sort gsk-3β/fyn/nrf2 pathway in fibroblasts and wounds of type 2 diabetes: on the road to an evidence-based therapy of non-healing wounds
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3609099/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23700526
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/adip.20235
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