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SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy

Autophagy is a well-known process that regulates cellular homeostasis by degrading malformed organelles and dysfunctional proteins. Normal autophagy is crucial to maintain the functionality of hypothalamic neurons, which are important in regulating energy balance. Fatty acids can be sensed by hypoth...

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Autores principales: Reginato, Andressa, Miyamoto, Josiane, Loganathan, Neruja, Ignácio-Souza, Letícia, Alberto Torsoni, Marcio, Torsoni, Adriana, Belsham, Denise, Milanski, Marciane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Endocrine Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551693/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-403
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author Reginato, Andressa
Miyamoto, Josiane
Loganathan, Neruja
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia
Alberto Torsoni, Marcio
Torsoni, Adriana
Belsham, Denise
Milanski, Marciane
author_facet Reginato, Andressa
Miyamoto, Josiane
Loganathan, Neruja
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia
Alberto Torsoni, Marcio
Torsoni, Adriana
Belsham, Denise
Milanski, Marciane
author_sort Reginato, Andressa
collection PubMed
description Autophagy is a well-known process that regulates cellular homeostasis by degrading malformed organelles and dysfunctional proteins. Normal autophagy is crucial to maintain the functionality of hypothalamic neurons, which are important in regulating energy balance. Fatty acids can be sensed by hypothalamic neurons and affect cell viability, inflammation and metabolic pathways. We recently found that the most prevalent dietary saturated fatty acid palmitate (PA) was able to induce hypothalamic autophagy by as yet undefined mechanisms. We are currently investigating if an unsaturated fatty acid palmitoleate (PO) has any effect on autophagy modulation. Given that unsaturated fatty acids protect other cells from palmitate-mediated dysfunction, we hypothesized that palmitoleate could protect neurons from palmitate-induced autophagy. We used the clonal, embryonic male, mHypoE-46, and adult-derived male, mHypoA-2/29, neuronal cell lines to evaluate autophagy modulation in response to palmitoleate (PO) treatment. Neurons were first treated with 25, 50 or 250 µM of PO alone. In the mHypoE-46 cells, the highest 250 µM concentration of PO was extremely toxic to the cells, as determined by cell death. In order to measure autophagy vacuoles (autophagosomes and autolysossomes) flow cytometry technique was performed. Partial data suggested that 25 and 50 µM PO was able to reduce overall autophagy. When we performed a co-treatment using PA (25 µM) and PO (25 µM), we observed that PA-mediated autophagy induction was blocked. In the mHypoA-2/29 cells, all concentrations of PO alone, including 250 µM, were able to reduce autophagy modulation, as detected by flow cytometry. We also tested the effect of a mixture of multiple saturated and unsaturated fatty acids (palmitate, stearic, oleic, linoleic and arachidonic) in the mHypoE-46 cells and found that this mixture did not affect autophagy. Thus, the saturated fatty acid PA increases autophagy, and we present evidence that an unsaturated fatty acid PO may rescue this induction, contributing to an overall protective response in neurons. We are now investigating the molecular mechanisms by which specific fatty acids control neuronal autophagy and predict that these will be unique to saturated versus unsaturated fatty acids. Understanding how fatty acids affect autophagy in neurons that control food intake could potentially represent a promising therapeutic target against obesity.
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spelling pubmed-65516932019-06-13 SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy Reginato, Andressa Miyamoto, Josiane Loganathan, Neruja Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Alberto Torsoni, Marcio Torsoni, Adriana Belsham, Denise Milanski, Marciane J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Autophagy is a well-known process that regulates cellular homeostasis by degrading malformed organelles and dysfunctional proteins. Normal autophagy is crucial to maintain the functionality of hypothalamic neurons, which are important in regulating energy balance. Fatty acids can be sensed by hypothalamic neurons and affect cell viability, inflammation and metabolic pathways. We recently found that the most prevalent dietary saturated fatty acid palmitate (PA) was able to induce hypothalamic autophagy by as yet undefined mechanisms. We are currently investigating if an unsaturated fatty acid palmitoleate (PO) has any effect on autophagy modulation. Given that unsaturated fatty acids protect other cells from palmitate-mediated dysfunction, we hypothesized that palmitoleate could protect neurons from palmitate-induced autophagy. We used the clonal, embryonic male, mHypoE-46, and adult-derived male, mHypoA-2/29, neuronal cell lines to evaluate autophagy modulation in response to palmitoleate (PO) treatment. Neurons were first treated with 25, 50 or 250 µM of PO alone. In the mHypoE-46 cells, the highest 250 µM concentration of PO was extremely toxic to the cells, as determined by cell death. In order to measure autophagy vacuoles (autophagosomes and autolysossomes) flow cytometry technique was performed. Partial data suggested that 25 and 50 µM PO was able to reduce overall autophagy. When we performed a co-treatment using PA (25 µM) and PO (25 µM), we observed that PA-mediated autophagy induction was blocked. In the mHypoA-2/29 cells, all concentrations of PO alone, including 250 µM, were able to reduce autophagy modulation, as detected by flow cytometry. We also tested the effect of a mixture of multiple saturated and unsaturated fatty acids (palmitate, stearic, oleic, linoleic and arachidonic) in the mHypoE-46 cells and found that this mixture did not affect autophagy. Thus, the saturated fatty acid PA increases autophagy, and we present evidence that an unsaturated fatty acid PO may rescue this induction, contributing to an overall protective response in neurons. We are now investigating the molecular mechanisms by which specific fatty acids control neuronal autophagy and predict that these will be unique to saturated versus unsaturated fatty acids. Understanding how fatty acids affect autophagy in neurons that control food intake could potentially represent a promising therapeutic target against obesity. Endocrine Society 2019-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6551693/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-403 Text en Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
Reginato, Andressa
Miyamoto, Josiane
Loganathan, Neruja
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia
Alberto Torsoni, Marcio
Torsoni, Adriana
Belsham, Denise
Milanski, Marciane
SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title_full SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title_fullStr SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title_full_unstemmed SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title_short SAT-403 Palmitoleate Reverses Palmitate-Induced Autophagy
title_sort sat-403 palmitoleate reverses palmitate-induced autophagy
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551693/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-403
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