Autophagy
-
The mammalian target of rapamycin (MTOR) protein kinase complex is a key component of a pathway that regulates cell growth and proliferation in response to energy levels, hypoxia, nutrients and insulin. Inhibition of MTORC1 strongly induces autophagy by regulating the activity of the ULK protein kinase complex that is required for the formation of autophagosomes. However, the participation of MTORC1 in the expression of autophagy genes has not been characterized. ⋯ Pharmacological or genetic inhibition of MTORC1 causes dissociation of the TFEB/YWHA complex and rapid transport of TFEB to the nucleus where it increases transcription of multiple genes implicated in autophagy and lysosomal function. Active TFEB also associates with late endosomal/lysosomal membranes through interaction with the LAMTOR/RRAG/MTORC1 complex. Our results unveil a novel role for MTORC1 in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis by regulating autophagy at the transcriptional level.
-
Hyperglycemia is linked to increased heart failure among diabetic patients. However, the mechanisms that mediate hyperglycemia-induced cardiac damage remain poorly understood. Autophagy is a cellular degradation pathway that plays important roles in cellular homeostasis. ⋯ Mechanistically, the high glucose-induced inhibition of autophagy was mediated at least partly by increased mTOR signaling that likely inactivated ULK1 through phosphorylation at serine 467. Together, these findings demonstrate that high glucose inhibits autophagy, which is a beneficial adaptive response that protects cardiomyocytes against high glucose toxicity. Future studies are warranted to determine if autophagy plays a similar role in diabetic heart in vivo.
-
Hypoxia-inducible pro-death protein BNIP3 (BCL-2/adenovirus E1B 19-kDa interacting protein 3), provokes mitochondrial permeabilization causing cardiomyocyte death in ischemia-reperfusion injury. Inhibition of autophagy accelerates BNIP3-induced cell death, by preventing removal of damaged mitochondria. We tested the hypothesis that stimulating autophagy will attenuate BNIP3-induced cardiomyocyte death. ⋯ Forced expression of transcription factor EB (TFEB) in BNIP3-expressing cells increased lysosome numbers, decreased autophagosomes and increased autolysosomes, prevented p62 accumulation, removed depolarized mitochondria and attenuated BNIP3-induced death. We conclude that BNIP3 expression induced autophagosome accumulation with lysosome consumption in cardiomyocytes. Forced expression of TFEB, a lysosomal biogenesis factor, restored autophagosome processing and attenuated BNIP3-induced cell death.
-
Intracellular accumulation of altered proteins, including p62 and ubiquitinated proteins, is the basis of most neurodegenerative disorders. The relationship among the accumulation of altered proteins, autophagy, and spinal cord dysfunction by cervical spondylotic myelopathy has not been clarified. We examined the expression of p62 and autophagy markers in the chronically compressed spinal cord of tiptoe-walking Yoshimura mice. ⋯ Treatment with 3-methyladenine, an autophagy inhibitor decreased the number of neuronal cells, whereas lithium chloride, an autophagy inducer increased the number of cells under hypoxic stress. These findings suggest that autophagy promotes neuronal cell survival under hypoxic stress. Our findings suggest that pharmacological inducers of autophagy may be useful for treating cervical spondylotic myelopathy patients.
-
Autophagy, a cellular program for organelle and protein turnover, represents primarily a cell survival mechanism. However, the role of autophagy in the regulation of apoptosis remains unclear. We have observed increases in morphological and biochemical indicators of autophagy in human lung from patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). ⋯ Caveolin-1 knockout mice exhibit increased autophagic markers, apoptosis, and airspace enlargement in the lung in response to chronic cigarette smoke. These studies demonstrate that LC3B can promote tissue injury during chronic cigarette smoke exposure, and suggest a mechanism by which LC3B, through interactions with caveolin-1 and Fas, can regulate apoptosis. Targeting the autophagic pathway may represent an experimental therapeutic strategy when designing new approaches to COPD treatment.