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Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis

Autophagy is one of the main cytoprotective mechanisms that cancer cells deploy to withstand the cytotoxic stress and survive the lethal damage induced by anti-cancer drugs. However, under specific conditions, autophagy may, directly or indirectly, induce cell death. In our study, treatment of the A...

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Autores principales: Kharaziha, Pedram, Chioureas, Dimitris, Baltatzis, George, Fonseca, Pedro, Rodriguez, Patricia, Gogvadze, Vladimir, Lennartsson, Lena, Björklund, Ann-Charlotte, Zhivotovsky, Boris, Grandér, Dan, Egevad, Lars, Nilsson, Sten, Panaretakis, Theocharis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26416459
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author Kharaziha, Pedram
Chioureas, Dimitris
Baltatzis, George
Fonseca, Pedro
Rodriguez, Patricia
Gogvadze, Vladimir
Lennartsson, Lena
Björklund, Ann-Charlotte
Zhivotovsky, Boris
Grandér, Dan
Egevad, Lars
Nilsson, Sten
Panaretakis, Theocharis
author_facet Kharaziha, Pedram
Chioureas, Dimitris
Baltatzis, George
Fonseca, Pedro
Rodriguez, Patricia
Gogvadze, Vladimir
Lennartsson, Lena
Björklund, Ann-Charlotte
Zhivotovsky, Boris
Grandér, Dan
Egevad, Lars
Nilsson, Sten
Panaretakis, Theocharis
author_sort Kharaziha, Pedram
collection PubMed
description Autophagy is one of the main cytoprotective mechanisms that cancer cells deploy to withstand the cytotoxic stress and survive the lethal damage induced by anti-cancer drugs. However, under specific conditions, autophagy may, directly or indirectly, induce cell death. In our study, treatment of the Atg5-deficient DU145 prostate cancer cells, with the multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor, sorafenib, induces mitochondrial damage, autophagy and cell death. Molecular inhibition of autophagy by silencing ULK1 and Beclin1 rescues DU145 cells from cell death indicating that, in this setting, autophagy promotes cell death. Re-expression of Atg5 restores the lipidation of LC3 and rescues DU145 and MEF atg5−/− cells from sorafenib-induced cell death. Despite the lack of Atg5 expression and LC3 lipidation, DU145 cells form autophagosomes as demonstrated by transmission and immuno-electron microscopy, and the formation of LC3 positive foci. However, the lack of cellular content in the autophagosomes, the accumulation of long-lived proteins, the presence of GFP-RFP-LC3 positive foci and the accumulated p62 protein levels indicate that these autophagosomes may not be fully functional. DU145 cells treated with sorafenib undergo a caspase-independent cell death that is inhibited by the RIPK1 inhibitor, necrostatin-1. Furthermore, treatment with sorafenib induces the interaction of RIPK1 with p62, as demonstrated by immunoprecipitation and a proximity ligation assay. Silencing of p62 decreases the RIPK1 protein levels and renders necrostatin-1 ineffective in blocking sorafenib-induced cell death. In summary, the formation of Atg5-deficient autophagosomes in response to sorafenib promotes the interaction of p62 with RIPK leading to cell death by necroptosis.
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spelling pubmed-47419162016-03-17 Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis Kharaziha, Pedram Chioureas, Dimitris Baltatzis, George Fonseca, Pedro Rodriguez, Patricia Gogvadze, Vladimir Lennartsson, Lena Björklund, Ann-Charlotte Zhivotovsky, Boris Grandér, Dan Egevad, Lars Nilsson, Sten Panaretakis, Theocharis Oncotarget Research paper: Autophagy and Cell Death Autophagy is one of the main cytoprotective mechanisms that cancer cells deploy to withstand the cytotoxic stress and survive the lethal damage induced by anti-cancer drugs. However, under specific conditions, autophagy may, directly or indirectly, induce cell death. In our study, treatment of the Atg5-deficient DU145 prostate cancer cells, with the multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor, sorafenib, induces mitochondrial damage, autophagy and cell death. Molecular inhibition of autophagy by silencing ULK1 and Beclin1 rescues DU145 cells from cell death indicating that, in this setting, autophagy promotes cell death. Re-expression of Atg5 restores the lipidation of LC3 and rescues DU145 and MEF atg5−/− cells from sorafenib-induced cell death. Despite the lack of Atg5 expression and LC3 lipidation, DU145 cells form autophagosomes as demonstrated by transmission and immuno-electron microscopy, and the formation of LC3 positive foci. However, the lack of cellular content in the autophagosomes, the accumulation of long-lived proteins, the presence of GFP-RFP-LC3 positive foci and the accumulated p62 protein levels indicate that these autophagosomes may not be fully functional. DU145 cells treated with sorafenib undergo a caspase-independent cell death that is inhibited by the RIPK1 inhibitor, necrostatin-1. Furthermore, treatment with sorafenib induces the interaction of RIPK1 with p62, as demonstrated by immunoprecipitation and a proximity ligation assay. Silencing of p62 decreases the RIPK1 protein levels and renders necrostatin-1 ineffective in blocking sorafenib-induced cell death. In summary, the formation of Atg5-deficient autophagosomes in response to sorafenib promotes the interaction of p62 with RIPK leading to cell death by necroptosis. Impact Journals LLC 2015-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4741916/ /pubmed/26416459 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Kharaziha 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 Research paper: Autophagy and Cell Death
Kharaziha, Pedram
Chioureas, Dimitris
Baltatzis, George
Fonseca, Pedro
Rodriguez, Patricia
Gogvadze, Vladimir
Lennartsson, Lena
Björklund, Ann-Charlotte
Zhivotovsky, Boris
Grandér, Dan
Egevad, Lars
Nilsson, Sten
Panaretakis, Theocharis
Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title_full Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title_fullStr Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title_full_unstemmed Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title_short Sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
title_sort sorafenib-induced defective autophagy promotes cell death by necroptosis
topic Research paper: Autophagy and Cell Death
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26416459
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