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p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate

The tumor suppressor p53 regulates downstream targets that determine cell fate. Canonical p53 functions include inducing apoptosis, growth arrest, and senescence. Non-canonical p53 functions include its ability to promote or inhibit autophagy and its ability to regulate metabolism. The extent to whi...

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Autores principales: Duan, Lei, Perez, Ricardo E., Davaadelger, Batzaya, Dedkova, Elena N., Blatter, Lothar A., Maki, Carl G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26337205
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author Duan, Lei
Perez, Ricardo E.
Davaadelger, Batzaya
Dedkova, Elena N.
Blatter, Lothar A.
Maki, Carl G.
author_facet Duan, Lei
Perez, Ricardo E.
Davaadelger, Batzaya
Dedkova, Elena N.
Blatter, Lothar A.
Maki, Carl G.
author_sort Duan, Lei
collection PubMed
description The tumor suppressor p53 regulates downstream targets that determine cell fate. Canonical p53 functions include inducing apoptosis, growth arrest, and senescence. Non-canonical p53 functions include its ability to promote or inhibit autophagy and its ability to regulate metabolism. The extent to which autophagy and/or metabolic regulation determines cell fate by p53 is unclear. To address this, we compared cells resistant or sensitive to apoptosis by the p53 activator Nutlin-3a. In resistant cells, glycolysis was maintained upon Nutlin-3a treatment, and activated p53 promoted prosurvival autophagy. In contrast, in apoptosis sensitive cells activated p53 increased superoxide levels and inhibited glycolysis through repression of glycolytic pathway genes. Glycolysis inhibition and increased superoxide inhibited autophagy by repressing ATG genes essential for autophagic vesicle maturation. Inhibiting glycolysis increased superoxide and blocked autophagy in apoptosis-resistant cells, causing p62-dependent caspase-8 activation. Finally, treatment with 2-DG or the autophagy inhibitors chloroquine or bafilomycin A1 sensitized resistant cells to Nutlin-3a-induced apoptosis. Together, these findings reveal novel links between glycolysis and autophagy that determine apoptosis-sensitivity in response to p53. Specifically, the findings indicate 1) that glycolysis plays an essential role in autophagy by limiting superoxide levels and maintaining expression of ATG genes required for autophagic vesicle maturation, 2) that p53 can promote or inhibit autophagy depending on the status of glycolysis, and 3) that inhibiting protective autophagy can expand the breadth of cells susceptible to Nutlin-3a induced apoptosis.
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spelling pubmed-46951092016-01-26 p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate Duan, Lei Perez, Ricardo E. Davaadelger, Batzaya Dedkova, Elena N. Blatter, Lothar A. Maki, Carl G. Oncotarget Priority Research Paper The tumor suppressor p53 regulates downstream targets that determine cell fate. Canonical p53 functions include inducing apoptosis, growth arrest, and senescence. Non-canonical p53 functions include its ability to promote or inhibit autophagy and its ability to regulate metabolism. The extent to which autophagy and/or metabolic regulation determines cell fate by p53 is unclear. To address this, we compared cells resistant or sensitive to apoptosis by the p53 activator Nutlin-3a. In resistant cells, glycolysis was maintained upon Nutlin-3a treatment, and activated p53 promoted prosurvival autophagy. In contrast, in apoptosis sensitive cells activated p53 increased superoxide levels and inhibited glycolysis through repression of glycolytic pathway genes. Glycolysis inhibition and increased superoxide inhibited autophagy by repressing ATG genes essential for autophagic vesicle maturation. Inhibiting glycolysis increased superoxide and blocked autophagy in apoptosis-resistant cells, causing p62-dependent caspase-8 activation. Finally, treatment with 2-DG or the autophagy inhibitors chloroquine or bafilomycin A1 sensitized resistant cells to Nutlin-3a-induced apoptosis. Together, these findings reveal novel links between glycolysis and autophagy that determine apoptosis-sensitivity in response to p53. Specifically, the findings indicate 1) that glycolysis plays an essential role in autophagy by limiting superoxide levels and maintaining expression of ATG genes required for autophagic vesicle maturation, 2) that p53 can promote or inhibit autophagy depending on the status of glycolysis, and 3) that inhibiting protective autophagy can expand the breadth of cells susceptible to Nutlin-3a induced apoptosis. Impact Journals LLC 2015-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4695109/ /pubmed/26337205 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Duan et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Priority Research Paper
Duan, Lei
Perez, Ricardo E.
Davaadelger, Batzaya
Dedkova, Elena N.
Blatter, Lothar A.
Maki, Carl G.
p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title_full p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title_fullStr p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title_full_unstemmed p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title_short p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
title_sort p53-regulated autophagy is controlled by glycolysis and determines cell fate
topic Priority Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26337205
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