4.7 Article

Autophagy guards tendon homeostasis

期刊

CELL DEATH & DISEASE
卷 13, 期 4, 页码 -

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-022-04824-7

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资金

  1. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF18OC0052955]
  2. Nordea Foundation
  3. Lundbeck Foundation [R198-2015-207]
  4. Italian Association for Cancer Research [IG2017-20719]
  5. Lundbeck Foundation [R198-2015-207] Funding Source: researchfish

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Autophagy plays a crucial role in tendon homeostasis and quality control through regulating the secretion of type I procollagen. Activation of autophagy alters the ultrastructural morphology of tendons and negatively affects their biomechanical properties. It may contribute to the development of injured tendons.
Tendons are vital collagen-dense specialized connective tissues transducing the force from skeletal muscle to the bone, thus enabling movement of the human body. Tendon cells adjust matrix turnover in response to physiological tissue loading and pathological overloading (tendinopathy). Nevertheless, the regulation of tendon matrix quality control is still poorly understood and the pathogenesis of tendinopathy is presently unsolved. Autophagy, the major mechanism of degradation and recycling of cellular components, plays a fundamental role in the homeostasis of several tissues. Here, we investigate the contribution of autophagy to human tendons' physiology, and we provide in vivo evidence that it is an active process in human tendon tissue. We show that selective autophagy of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER-phagy), regulates the secretion of type I procollagen (PC1), the major component of tendon extracellular matrix. Pharmacological activation of autophagy by inhibition of mTOR pathway alters the ultrastructural morphology of three-dimensional tissue-engineered tendons, shifting collagen fibrils size distribution. Moreover, autophagy induction negatively affects the biomechanical properties of the tissue-engineered tendons, causing a reduction in mechanical strength under tensile force. Overall, our results provide the first evidence that autophagy regulates tendon homeostasis by controlling PC1 quality control, thus potentially playing a role in the development of injured tendons.

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