4.8 Article

Regulation of ER stress-induced macroautophagy by protein kinase C

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 841-843

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/auto.6607

Keywords

unfolded protein response; protein kinase C theta; calcium; autophagy; endoplasmic reticulum; autophagosome

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Funding

  1. NIH [DK042394, HL052173, HL057346]

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The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the primary site for folding and quality control for proteins destined to the cell surface and intracellular organelles. A variety of cellular insults alter ER homeostasis to disrupt protein folding, cause the accumulation of misfolded proteins, and activate an autophagic response. However, the molecular signaling pathways required for ER stress-induced autophagy are largely unknown. Recently, we discovered that a novel-type protein kinase C family member (PKC theta) is required for ER stress-induced autophagy. We show that ER stress, in a Ca2+-dependent manner, induces PKC theta phosphorylation within the activation loop and localization with LC3-II in punctate cytoplasmic structures. Pharmacological inhibition, siRNA-mediated knockdown, or transdominant-negative mutant expression of PKC theta block the ER stress-induced autophagic response. PKC theta activation is not required for autophagy induced by amino acid starvation, and PKC theta activation in response to ER stress does not require either the mTOR kinase or the unfolded protein response signaling pathways. Herein, we review and discuss the significance of these findings with respect to regulation of autophagy in response to ER stress.

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