1. Academic Validation
  2. Hyperosmotic Stress Induces Unconventional Autophagy Independent of the Ulk1 Complex

Hyperosmotic Stress Induces Unconventional Autophagy Independent of the Ulk1 Complex

  • Mol Cell Biol. 2019 Jul 29;39(16):e00024-19. doi: 10.1128/MCB.00024-19.
Naoki Tamura 1 Shun Kageyama 2 Masaaki Komatsu 2 3 Satoshi Waguri 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Anatomy and Histology, Fukushima Medical University School of Medicine, Fukushima, Japan.
  • 2 Department of Biochemistry, Niigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Niigata, Japan.
  • 3 Department of Physiology, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 4 Department of Anatomy and Histology, Fukushima Medical University School of Medicine, Fukushima, Japan [email protected].
Abstract

Autophagy is considered an adaptive mechanism against hyperosmotic stress. Although the process has been reported to be triggered by the inhibition of mTORC1, the precise downstream mechanisms remain elusive. Here, we demonstrate that hyperosmotic-stress-induced Autophagy is different from conventional macroautophagy in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) and human T24 cells. Our results indicated that cytoplasmic puncta for the isolation membrane markers WIPI2 and Atg16L increased after hyperosmotic stress. They were found to partially colocalize with puncta for a selective Autophagy substrate, SQSTM1/p62, and were shown to be diminished by inhibitors of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) or by knockdown of human Vps34 (hVps34), a component of PI3K. In addition, flux assays showed that SQSTM1/p62 and NcoA4 were degraded by the lysosomal pathway. Surprisingly, ULK1, which is essential for starvation-induced macroautophagy, remained inactivated under hyperosmotic stress, which was partially caused by mTOR activity. Accordingly, the ULK1 complex was not nucleated under hyperosmotic stress. Finally, Autophagy proceeded even in MEFs deficient in RB1CC1/FIP200 or Atg13, which encode components of the ULK1 complex. These data suggest that hyperosmotic-stress-induced Autophagy represents an unconventional type of Autophagy that bypasses ULK1 signaling.

Keywords

Ulk1; autophagy; hyperosmotic stress; mTOR.

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