1. Academic Validation
  2. DHRSX, a novel non-classical secretory protein associated with starvation induced autophagy

DHRSX, a novel non-classical secretory protein associated with starvation induced autophagy

  • Int J Med Sci. 2014 Jul 10;11(9):962-70. doi: 10.7150/ijms.9529.
Guoying Zhang 1 Yang Luo 1 Ge Li 1 Lanlan Wang 1 Daxiang Na 1 Xiaotong Wu 1 Yingmei Zhang 1 Xiaoning Mo 1 Lu Wang 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 1. Center for Human Disease Genomics, Department of Immunology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Health Science Center, Peking University, Beijing 100191, P. R. China ; 2. Key Laboratory of Medical Immunology, Ministry of Health, School of Basic Medical Science, Peking University, Beijing 100191, P. R. China.
Abstract

Dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR family) X-linked (DHRSX) is a novel human gene without any substantial functional annotation and was initially cloned and identified in our laboratory. In this study, we present evidence that it encodes a non-classical secretory protein and promotes starvation induced Autophagy. Using the Baf.A1 assay and N-terminal sequencing, we showed that DHRSX is secreted in a non-classical form. We expressed and purified a recombinant human GST-DHRSX fusion protein. Functional studies revealed that HeLa and U2OS cells overexpressing DHRSX or treated with the GST-DHRSX fusion protein exhibited higher levels of starvation-induced Autophagy, resulting in increased endogenous LC3-II levels, a punctate GFP-LC3 distribution, and structures associated with Autophagy, with a lower accumulation of Autophagy substrates such as p62 and polyQ80. Accordingly, knockdown of endogenous DHRSX through specific siRNAs reduced LC3-II levels obviously in U2OS cells induced by starvation. Collectively, these results demonstrate that DHRSX is a novel non-classical secretory protein involved in the positive regulation of starvation induced Autophagy and provide a new avenue for research on this protein family and Autophagy regulation.

Keywords

Autophagy; DHRSX; Non-classical secretory protein; Novel gene.

Figures