4.6 Article

AMPK-independent induction of autophagy by cytosolic Ca2+ increase

Journal

CELLULAR SIGNALLING
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 914-925

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2010.01.015

Keywords

Autophagy; LC3; Mammalian target of rapamycin; Phosphoinositide-3 phosphate; Thapsigargin; WIPI-1

Categories

Funding

  1. AstraZeneca [Ku-0063794]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 773, GK1302]
  3. Federal Ministry for Education and Science (BMBF BioProfile)
  4. Ministry of Science, Research and Arts, Baden-Wurttemberg [142398101]
  5. Interdisciplinary Center of Clinical Research, Faculty of Medicine, Tubingen [1805-0-0]
  6. Landesgraduierten Stiftung Baden-Wurttemberg

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Autophagy is a eukaryotic lysosomal bulk degradation system initiated by cytosolic cargo sequestration in autophagosomes. The Ser/Thr kinase mTOR has been shown to constitute a central role in controlling the initiation of autophagy by integrating multiple nutrient-dependent signaling pathways that crucially involves the activity of PI3K class III to generate the phosphoinositide PI(3)P. Recent reports demonstrate that the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ can induce autophagy by inhibition of mTOR via the CaMKK-alpha/beta-mediated activation of AMPK. Here we demonstrate that Ca2+ signaling can additionally induce autophagy independently of the Ca2+-mediated activation of AMPK. First, by LC3-II protein monitoring in the absence or presence of lysosomal inhibitors we confirm that the elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ induces autophagosome generation and does not merely block autophagosome degradation. Further, we demonstrate that Ca2+-chelation strongly inhibits autophagy in human, mouse and chicken cells. Strikingly, we found that the PI(3)P-binding protein WIPI-1 (Atg18) responds to the increase of cytosolic Ca2+ by localizing to autophagosomal membranes (WIPI-1 puncta) and that Ca2+-chelation inhibits WIPI-1 puncta formation, although PI(3)P-generation is not generally affected by these Ca2+ flux modifications. Importantly, using AMPK-alpha 1(-/-)alpha 2(-/-) MEFs we show that thapsigargin application triggers autophagy in the absence of AMPK and does not involve complete mTOR inhibition, as detected by p7056K phosphorylation. In addition, STO-609-mediated CaMKK-alpha/beta inhibition decreased the level of thapsigargin-induced autophagy only in AMPK-positive cells. We suggest that apart from reported AMPK-dependent regulation of autophagic degradation, an AMPK-independent pathway triggers Ca2+-mediated autophagy, involving the PI(3)P-effector protein WIPI-1 and LC3. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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