4.6 Review

Adding Some Splice to Stress Eating: Autophagy, ESCRT and Alternative Splicing Orchestrate the Cellular Stress Response

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12081196

Keywords

autophagy; ESCRT; alternative splicing; cancer; neurodegenerative and eye disease

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-04034-2020]

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Autophagy is a crucial pathway for cellular homeostasis, with ESCRT proteins and alternative pre-mRNA splicing playing important roles in regulating this process. Dysfunction in these mechanisms can lead to impaired cellular stress response or trigger pathogenic reactions, ultimately contributing to human diseases.
Autophagy is a widely studied self-renewal pathway that is essential for degrading damaged cellular organelles or recycling biomolecules to maintain cellular homeostasis, particularly under cellular stress. This pathway initiates with formation of an autophagosome, which is a double-membrane structure that envelopes cytosolic components and fuses with a lysosome to facilitate degradation of the contents. The endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) proteins play an integral role in controlling autophagosome fusion events and disruption to this machinery leads to autophagosome accumulation. Given the central role of autophagy in maintaining cellular health, it is unsurprising that dysfunction of this process is associated with many human maladies including cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. The cell can also rapidly respond to cellular stress through alternative pre-mRNA splicing that enables adaptive changes to the cell's proteome in response to stress. Thus, alternative pre-mRNA splicing of genes that are involved in autophagy adds another layer of complexity to the cell's stress response. Consequently, the dysregulation of alternative splicing of genes associated with autophagy and ESCRT may also precipitate disease states by either reducing the ability of the cell to respond to stress or triggering a maladaptive response that is pathogenic. In this review, we summarize the diverse roles of the ESCRT machinery and alternative splicing in regulating autophagy and how their dysfunction can have implications for human disease.

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