Defective autophagy associated with LC3 puncta in epothilone-resistant cancer cells
Article 2010 en
Authors
SS
Shensi Shen
OK
Oliver Kepp
IM
Isabelle Martins
Abstract
1 min read
Autophagy is commonly characterized by the redistribution of the microtubule-associated light chain 3 (LC3) protein into cytoplasmic puncta, coinciding with its lipidation, as well as by a decrease in the abundance of autophagic substrates including p62 and ubiquitinylated proteins. Here, we describe a cell line, A549-B480, which, in contrast to its parental A549 line, exhibits massive accumulation of LC3 (or a GFP-LC3 fusion protein) in cytoplasmic puncta. These puncta co-localize with accumulated p62 and ubiquitinylated proteins, yet are not enwrapped by membranes. Indeed, LC3 is not lipidated in A549-B480, even when these cells are cultured in conditions in which A549 cells would develop autophagy. A549-B480 cells have been selected for their resistance against the microtubule-stabilizing agent epothilone B and actually require the continuous presence of epothilone B for their survival. Parental A549 cells treated with epothilone B manifested all signs of bona fide autophagy. In contrast, the autophagic program of A549-B480 was defective, irrespective of the absence or presence of epothilone B, and correlated with the complete absence of Atg7, a protein that is reputed to be essential for autophagy. These results establish novel functional links between microtubules and autophagy, identify a new chemotherapy resistance-associated autophagic defect, and describe the existence of LC3 puncta outside from autophagosomes.
José Manuel Bravo‐San Pedro, Maria Chiara Maiuri, Nektarios Tavernarakis, Francesco Cecconi, Frank Madeo, Patrice Codogno, Lorenzo Galluzzi, Guido Guido Kroemer, Mireia Niso‐Santano
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