4.6 Article

Neuronal atg1 Coordinates Autophagy Induction and Physiological Adaptations to Balance mTORC1 Signalling

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12162024

Keywords

5HTR7 receptor; ageing; ATG1; autophagy; behaviour; cAMP/PKA; ecdysone; longevity; metabolism; mTORC1; serotonin transporter

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This study finds that the autophagy inducer atg1 affects serotonergic neurotransmission in the brain, promoting food-searching behavior and organismal metabolism. Moreover, ectopic neuronal atg1 expression regulates insulin pathway, peptidergic secretion, and cAMP/PKA, leading to diverse systemic effects on metabolism, development, melanisation, and longevity.
The mTORC1 nutrient-sensing pathway integrates metabolic and endocrine signals into the brain to evoke physiological responses to food deprivation, such as autophagy. Nevertheless, the impact of neuronal mTORC1 activity on neuronal circuits and organismal metabolism remains obscure. Here, we show that mTORC1 inhibition acutely perturbs serotonergic neurotransmission via proteostatic alterations evoked by the autophagy inducer atg1. Neuronal ATG1 alters the intracellular localization of the serotonin transporter, which increases the extracellular serotonin and stimulates the 5HTR7 postsynaptic receptor. 5HTR7 enhances food-searching behaviour and ecdysone-induced catabolism in Drosophila. Along similar lines, the pharmacological inhibition of mTORC1 in zebrafish also stimulates food-searching behaviour via serotonergic activity. These effects occur in parallel with neuronal autophagy induction, irrespective of the autophagic activity and the protein synthesis reduction. In addition, ectopic neuronal atg1 expression enhances catabolism via insulin pathway downregulation, impedes peptidergic secretion, and activates non-cell autonomous cAMP/PKA. The above exert diverse systemic effects on organismal metabolism, development, melanisation, and longevity. We conclude that neuronal atg1 aligns neuronal autophagy induction with distinct physiological modulations, to orchestrate a coordinated physiological response against reduced mTORC1 activity.

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