Defective apoptosis renders immortalized epithelial cells highly tumorigenic, but how this is impacted by other common tumor mutations is not known. In apoptosis-defective cells, inhibition of autophagy by AKT activation or by allelic disruption of beclin1 confers sensitivity to metabolic stress by inhibiting an autophagy-dependent survival pathway. While autophagy acts to buffer metabolic stress, the combined impairment of apoptosis and autophagy promotes necrotic cell death in vitro and in vivo. Thus, inhibiting autophagy under conditions of nutrient limitation can restore cell death to apoptosis-refractory tumors, but this necrosis is associated with inflammation and accelerated tumor growth. Thus, autophagy may function in tumor suppression by mitigating metabolic stress and, in concert with apoptosis, by preventing death by necrosis.
Autophagy is a cellular degradation pathway for the clearance of damaged or superfluous proteins and organelles. The recycling of these intracellular constituents also serves as an alternative energy source during periods of metabolic stress to maintain homeostasis and viability. In tumour cells with defects in apoptosis, autophagy allows prolonged survival. Paradoxically, autophagy defects are associated with increased tumorigenesis, but the mechanism behind this has not been determined. Recent evidence suggests that autophagy provides a protective function to limit tumour necrosis and inflammation, and to mitigate genome damage in tumour cells in response to metabolic stress.
SUMMARY Allelic loss of the essential autophagy gene beclin1 occurs in human cancers and renders mice tumor-prone suggesting that autophagy is a tumor-suppression mechanism. While tumor cells utilize autophagy to survive metabolic stress, autophagy also mitigates the resulting cellular damage that may limit tumorigenesis. In response to stress, autophagy-defective tumor cells preferentially accumulate p62/SQSTM1 (p62), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperones, damaged mitochondria, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and genome damage. Moreover, suppressing ROS or p62 accumulation prevented damage resulting from autophagy defects indicating that failure to regulate p62 caused oxidative stress. Importantly, sustained p62 expression resulting from autophagy defects was sufficient to alter NF-κB regulation and gene expression and to promote tumorigenesis. Thus defective autophagy is a mechanism for p62 upregulation commonly observed in human tumors that contributes directly to tumorigenesis likely by perturbing the signal transduction adaptor function of p62 controlling pathways critical for oncogenesis.
Autophagy is a catabolic pathway used by cells to support metabolism in response to starvation and to clear damaged proteins and organelles in response to stress. We report here that expression of a H-ras V12 or K-ras V12 oncogene up-regulates basal autophagy, which is required for tumor cell survival in starvation and in tumorigenesis.In Ras-expressing cells, defective autophagosome formation or cargo delivery causes accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and reduced oxygen consumption. Autophagy defects also lead to tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolite and energy depletion in starvation. As mitochondria sustain viability of Ras-expressing cells in starvation, autophagy is required to maintain the pool of functional mitochondria necessary to support growth of Ras-driven tumors. Human cancer cell lines bearing activating mutations in Ras commonly have high levels of basal autophagy, and, in a subset of these, down-regulating the expression of essential autophagy proteins impaired cell growth. As cancers with Ras mutations have a poor prognosis, this ''autophagy addiction'' suggests that targeting autophagy and mitochondrial metabolism are valuable new approaches to treat these aggressive cancers.
Autophagy is a bulk degradation process that promotes survival under metabolic stress, but it can also be a means of cell death if executed to completion. Monoallelic loss of the essential autophagy gene beclin1 causes susceptibility to metabolic stress, but also promotes tumorigenesis. This raises the paradox that the loss of a survival pathway enhances tumor growth, where the exact mechanism is not known. Here, we show that compromised autophagy promoted chromosome instability. Failure to sustain metabolism through autophagy was associated with increased DNA damage, gene amplification, and aneuploidy, and this genomic instability may promote tumorigenesis. Thus, autophagy maintains metabolism and survival during metabolic stress that serves to protect the genome, providing an explanation for how the loss of a survival pathway leads to tumor progression. Identification of this novel role of autophagy may be important for rational chemotherapy and therapeutic exploitation of autophagy inducers as potential chemopreventive agents.[Keywords: Autophagy; beclin1; genomic instability; apoptosis; cancer] Received February 23, 2007; revised version accepted April 12, 2007. Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process involving regulated turnover and elimination of proteins and cellular organelles, such as peroxisomes, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum, through the lysosomal degradation pathway (Mizushima 2005). The process of autophagy is characterized by the formation of double-membrane cytosolic vesicles, known as autophagosomes, that are essential for the lysosomal targeting of these organelles. In yeast, a number of autophagy-related genes (referred to as atg) have been identified that regulate the formation of autophagosomes and the autophagy process (Klionsky et al. 2003). Several mammalian homologs of these yeast genes have been identified (Levine and Klionsky 2004), among which the essential autophagy genes atg5 and atg7 have been most informative in demonstrating a role for autophagy in maintaining metabolism and homeostasis in mammalian development.Autophagy, constitutively active at low levels, is robustly activated under metabolic stress. Autophagy plays an important role in development, as mice deficient in autophagy due to complete deficiency of beclin1 (atg6/vps30), another essential autophagy gene, die early in embryogenesis (Yue et al. 2003). Mice lacking atg5 fail to survive the neonatal starvation period and die perinatally, suggesting that autophagy plays an important role in the maintenance of energy homeostasis (Kuma et al. 2004). Thus, autophagy functions as an alternative cellular energy source to maintain normal metabolism during development and starvation by recycling cytoplasm and macromolecules (Jin and White 2007). Furthermore, targeted deletion of atg5 and atg7 in the central nervous system results in accumulation of polyubiquitinated proteins leading to neurodegeneration, revealing a housekeeping role for autophagy in the regulation of long-lived or damaged proteins...
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