The molecular mechanisms involved in modulation of the antioxidant cell defence by survival signals remain largely unexplored. Here, we report a mechanistic connection between the survival signal elicited by nerve growth factor (NGF) and the antioxidant cell defence represented by heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) at the level of a newly identified Sp1 site in the human ho1 proximal promoter. By using luciferase reporter constructs we identified a PI3K-responsive region containing a GC-box that resembled the response element for Sp1. Indeed, transfection of Sp1-deficient SL2 cells, electrophoretic mobility shift assays, the use of the GC-box binding drug mithramycin, and mutation of the GC-box provided evidence for a Sp1-like site in the PI3K-sensitive region. Then, we observed with the use of a Sp1-Gal4 chimera that PI3K regulates the transactivating capacity of Sp1. Cotransfection of active PI3K and PKC-zeta expression vectors resulted in substantial increase of Sp1 phosphorylation and in synergistic activation of both Sp1-Gal4 and endogenous Sp1. Moreover, these effects were mimicked by cotransfection of active MEK and ERK expression vectors and were blocked by the MEK inhibitor PD98059. Inhibition of HO-1 with Sn protoporphyrin IX and blockage of Sp-1-mediatied upregulation of HO-1 with mithramycin attenuated antioxidant and cytoprotective functions of NGF against hydrogen peroxide. This study elucidates how NGF contributes to protection of target cells against oxidative stress.