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TFEB (Redirect)
TFEB
Pathway Diagram
Overview
TFEB (Transcription Factor EB) is a master regulator transcription factor belonging to the MiT/TFE family of basic helix-loop-helix leucine zipper proteins. This 476-amino acid protein functions as a central coordinator of lysosomal and autophagic gene expression, controlling the transcriptional programs that govern cellular clearance mechanisms. Located on chromosome 6q23.3 in humans, TFEB acts as a critical hub integrating cellular stress signals to modulate genes involved in autophagy, lysosomal biogenesis, and lysosomal degradation capacity. Its dysregulation or impaired activation has emerged as a significant contributor to multiple neurodegenerative diseases characterized by proteostatic failure.
Function/Biology
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TFEB
Pathway Diagram
Overview
TFEB (Transcription Factor EB) is a master regulator transcription factor belonging to the MiT/TFE family of basic helix-loop-helix leucine zipper proteins. This 476-amino acid protein functions as a central coordinator of lysosomal and autophagic gene expression, controlling the transcriptional programs that govern cellular clearance mechanisms. Located on chromosome 6q23.3 in humans, TFEB acts as a critical hub integrating cellular stress signals to modulate genes involved in autophagy, lysosomal biogenesis, and lysosomal degradation capacity. Its dysregulation or impaired activation has emerged as a significant contributor to multiple neurodegenerative diseases characterized by proteostatic failure.
Function/Biology
TFEB operates as the principal transcription factor binding to CLEAR (Coordinated Lysosomal Expression and Regulation) elements—short DNA sequences (GTCACGTGAC consensus motif) present in promoters of autophagy and lysosomal genes. Under basal conditions, TFEB remains predominantly cytoplasmic and phosphorylated, rendering it transcriptionally inactive. Upon activation through diverse cellular stress signals—including nutrient starvation, lysosomal damage, or accumulation of protein aggregates—TFEB undergoes dephosphorylation and translocates to the nucleus where it initiates transcription of its target genes.
The protein interacts with co-factors including TFE3 (another MiT family member) and MITF (Microphthalmia-associated Transcription Factor) to form dimeric complexes that recognize and bind CLEAR elements. TFEB directly regulates approximately 200-400 genes implicated in autophagosome biogenesis (ATG genes), lysosomal enzyme production (cathepsin proteases, β-glucuronidase), lysosomal membrane proteins (LAMP1, LAMP2, MFSD12), and mitochondrial quality control. This comprehensive transcriptional program essentially upregulates the entire cellular degradation infrastructure.
Role in Neurodegeneration
Impaired TFEB function has been implicated in multiple neurodegenerative diseases, particularly those involving protein aggregation and lysosomal dysfunction. In Alzheimer's disease, TFEB activation is compromised due to aberrant phosphorylation and sequestration of the transcription factor, leading to reduced autophagy capacity and impaired clearance of amyloid-beta and phosphorylated tau pathology. Similarly, in Parkinson's disease, defective TFEB signaling contributes to α-synuclein accumulation, as the protein preferentially aggregates in neurons with reduced autophagic flux.
In lysosomal storage diseases like Gaucher disease and Niemann-Pick disease type C, genetic TFEB activation or overexpression has demonstrated therapeutic potential by compensating for deficient lysosomal enzyme function. Experimental TFEB activation triggers a "transcriptional surge" of related lysosomal hydrolases that partially rescue the storage phenotype. Huntington's disease and ALS similarly show therapeutic benefits from TFEB pathway enhancement, suggesting a common vulnerability across neurodegenerative conditions—the failure of protein quality control networks.
Molecular Mechanisms
TFEB phosphorylation status represents the primary regulatory mechanism. The kinase mTORC1 (mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1) phosphorylates TFEB at the amino terminus (S142, S211 in humans), preventing nuclear entry. During nutrient stress or mTORC1 inhibition, protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) and calcineurin dephosphorylate TFEB, enabling nuclear accumulation and target gene activation. AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) also phosphorylates TFEB under energy stress conditions but through distinct regulatory mechanisms involving Rag GTPases and GATOR complexes.
Additionally, GSK3β and ERK2 kinases regulate TFEB phosphorylation in context-dependent manners. Post-translational modifications including SUMOylation and ubiquitination modulate TFEB stability and activity. The Rag GTPase complex, which senses amino acid availability and signals through mTORC1, represents a critical upstream node controlling TFEB nuclear translocation.
Clinical/Research Significance
TFEB activation has emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy across neurodegenerative diseases. Small molecule TFEB activators and mTORC1 inhibitors (such as rapamycin analogs) promote TFEB-dependent autophagy enhancement and lysosomal expansion. Gene therapy approaches delivering TFEB directly to affected tissues have shown preclinical efficacy in neurodegeneration models. Understanding TFEB biology illuminates fundamental principles of proteostasis maintenance and suggests that TFEB-mediated autophagy enhancement represents a convergent therapeutic intervention applicable across multiple disease contexts.
Related Entities
- TFE3: Related MiT family transcription factor with overlapping CLEAR element binding and cellular stress response functions
- Autophagy: Primary TFEB-regulated cellular pathway clearing protein aggregates
- mTORC1: Upstream kinase regulating TFEB phosphorylation
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-d0b4eccd7d1c |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'entities-tfeb'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
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