- NRF2 is an evolutionarily conserved, pleiotropic integrator of redox, metabolic, proteostatic and inflammatory homeostasis, acting as a fundamental guardian of health.
- Functions as a rheostat regulating adaptive resilience via hormetic activation, linking molecular defence with lifestyle-based interventions for healthspan extension and preventive medicine.
- Complex, context-dependent regulation across species, tissues, sexes and lifespan creates both therapeutic opportunities and dualistic risks in disease management and precision medicine.
Redox Biol. 2026 May 15;94:104217. doi: 10.1016/j.redox.2026.104217. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
NRF2 (Nuclear Factor Erythroid 2-Related Factor 2) has traditionally been viewed as a master regulator of the antioxidant response. However, emerging evidence redefines NRF2 as a pleiotropic and evolutionarily conserved systems-level integrator of redox, metabolic, proteostatic, and inflammatory homeostasis, i.e., an evolutionarily conserved guardian of health. From its origins as an adaptive response to rising atmospheric oxygen in early metazoans to its role in orchestrating complex cytoprotective networks in humans, NRF2 exemplifies the biological transition from stress resistance to adaptive resilience. Understanding its regulation across species, tissues, life stages and gender offers novel perspectives for combating age-related cellular dysfunction and reframing the dynamic process of redox regulation as a component of adaptive homeostasis in a precision medicine perspective. This review summarizes and integrates essential concepts currently being developed regarding the evolutionary roots of NRF2, its molecular and regulatory complexity, its dualistic role in health and disease, and its potential as a biomarker of resilience and therapeutic target. We highlight NRF2’s function as a rheostat rather than a binary stress switch, including the role of hormetic activation through lifestyle and environmental stimuli. By maintaining redox homeostasis and dynamic adaptive stress responses, NRF2 bridges molecular defense mechanisms with strategies for healthspan extension and preventive medicine from very early life stages until senescence.
PMID:42155153 | DOI:10.1016/j.redox.2026.104217
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