4.6 Article

Glucose-starved Cells Do Not Engage in Prosurvival Autophagy

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 288, Issue 42, Pages 30387-30398

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.490581

Keywords

Apoptosis; Autophagy; Glucose; mTOR; Necrosis (Necrotic Death)

Funding

  1. Fundacio Marato TV3 Grant [111630/31]
  2. Secretaria for Universities and Research (SUR) of the ECO of the Government of Catalonia fellowship
  3. Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias of Spain [PI10/00104]
  4. Cancer Research UK [15816] Funding Source: researchfish

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In response to nutrient shortage or organelle damage, cells undergo macroautophagy. Starvation of glucose, an essential nutrient, is thought to promote autophagy in mammalian cells. We thus aimed to determine the role of autophagy in cell death induced by glucose deprivation. Glucose withdrawal induces cell death that can occur by apoptosis (in Bax, Bak-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts or HeLa cells) or by necrosis (in Rh4 rhabdomyosarcoma cells). Inhibition of autophagy by chemical or genetic means by using 3-methyladenine, chloroquine, a dominant negative form of ATG4B or silencing Beclin-1, Atg7, or p62 indicated that macroautophagy does not protect cells undergoing necrosis or apoptosis upon glucose deprivation. Moreover, glucose deprivation did not induce autophagic flux in any of the four cell lines analyzed, even though mTOR was inhibited. Indeed, glucose deprivation inhibited basal autophagic flux. In contrast, the glycolytic inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose induced prosurvival autophagy. Further analyses indicated that in the absence of glucose, autophagic flux induced by other stimuli is inhibited. These data suggest that the role of autophagy in response to nutrient starvation should be reconsidered.

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