| Literature DB >> 22669258 |
Kanchan Phadwal1, Alexander Scarth Watson, Anna Katharina Simon.
Abstract
Autophagy is a constitutive lysosomal catabolic pathway that degrades damaged organelles and protein aggregates. Stem cells are characterized by self-renewal, pluripotency, and quiescence; their long life span, limited capacity to dilute cellular waste and spent organelles due to quiescence, along with their requirement for remodeling in order to differentiate, all suggest that they require autophagy more than other cell types. Here, we review the current literature on the role of autophagy in embryonic and adult stem cells, including hematopoietic, mesenchymal, and neuronal stem cells, highlighting the diverse and contrasting roles autophagy plays in their biology. Furthermore, we review the few studies on stem cells, lysosomal activity, and autophagy. Novel techniques to detect autophagy in primary cells are required to study autophagy in different stem cell types. These will help to elucidate the importance of autophagy in stem cells during transplantation, a promising therapeutic approach for many diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22669258 PMCID: PMC3535400 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-012-1032-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
List of autophagy modulators in stem cells
| Mode of action | References | |
|---|---|---|
| Modulator | ||
| mTOR | mTOR inhibition induces autophagy | [ |
| miR-17, 20, 93, 106 | Targets SQSTM1/p62 | [ |
| PTEN | A tumor suppressor, autophagy inducer via AKT | [ |
| P53 | A tumor suppressor, inhibition of p53 induces autophagy | [ |
| DRAM | Stress-induced regulator of autophagy | [ |
| HDAC6 | Histone deacetylase-6, quality control of autophagy, regulates autophagosome-lysosomal fusion | [ |
| TFEB | Transcription factor EB, master transcription factor for lysosomal biogenesis, drives expression of autophagy and lysosomal genes | [ |
| mTORC1 | Phosphorylates the ULK1-mAtg13-FIP200 autophagy regulatory complex, inhibits autophagy | [ |
| Chemical modulators | ||
| Starvation and dietary restriction (DR) | Autophagy inducer via mTOR inhibition/SIRT-dependent pathway | [ |
| Rapamycin | Autophagy inducer via mTOR inhibition | [ |
| Chloroquine (CQ) | Lysosomotropic agent, inhibits fusion of lysosomes with autophagosomes | [ |
| 3-methyladenine (3MA) | Autophagy sequestration inhibitor | [ |
| LY294002 | Inhibits autophagy via phosphoinositide 3-kinases | [ |
| Bafilomycin A (BafA) | Vacuolar ATPase inhibitor, interferes with the autophagosome–lysosomal fusion step | [ |
| E64D/pepstatin A (PepA) | Inhibition of lysosomal hydrolases, blocks the flux of autophagic pathway | [ |
Fig. 1a Autophagy, a lysosomal degradation pathway engulfing organelles and protein aggregates. b Autophagy is involved in maintaining and regulating all the basic properties of stem cells like self-renewal, quiescence, differentiation, and proliferation
Role of autophagy in development, differentiation, and aging of stem cells
| Type of stem cells | Role | References |
|---|---|---|
| Embryonic stem cells | Clearance of dead cells during embryonic morphogenesis, efficient removal of apoptotic cells, removal of defective mitochondria and ubiquitinated proteins, maintain proliferation, degrades midbodies in ESC differentiation | [ |
| Adult stem cells | Cellular remodeling during differentiation and development, maintain quiescence | [ |
| Hematopoietic stem cells | Homeostatic proliferation, effective mitochondrial removal, preventing DNA damage, self-renewal, lineage fate | [ |
| Mesenchymal stem cells | Cytoprotective response, differentiation | [ |
| Neuronal stem cells | Differentiation, survival under nutrient stress | [ |
| Stem cell aging | HSC proliferation and function, stem cell senescence, immunosenescence, myelogenesis, removal of defective mitochondria, proteolysis, reducing oncogenesis | [ |
Phenotypes of knockout mice of autophagy-related genes in stem cells
| Genesgenotype | Tissue/promoter | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beclin1−/− | ESC | Die early in embryogenesis | [ |
| Beclin+/− | ESC | Develop tumors, apoptotic cell death | [ |
| Atg5−/− | ESC | Autophagy-dependent defective clearance of apoptotic cell corpses during development | [ |
| Ambra1−/− | ESC | Embryonic lethality | [ |
| Ambragt/gt | ESC/gene-trapped allele | Over proliferation, increased apoptosis | [ |
| Atg7fl/fl | HSC/Vav | Unable to self-renew, defective mitochondrial removal, significantly reduced myeloid and lymphoid progenitors in BM, myeloproliferation of LSK compartment, myeloid leukemia | [ |
| FIP200fl/fl | HSC/ Tie-2 | Embryonic lethality, HSC depletion, loss of self-renewal, block of erythroid maturation, myeloproliferation, increased mitochondrial load and DNA damage | [ |
Fig. 2A summary model depicting implication of loss of autophagy, the symptoms and consequences observed in various in vivo and in vitro studies in ESCs and ASCs
Fig. 3Tightrope act inhibition of mTOR via caloric restriction (CR) or rapamycin induces autophagy. Autophagy clears away damaged proteins and organelles like defective mitochondria, thereby decreasing ROS levels and reducing genomic damage and cellular senescence, thus playing a crucial role in enhancing stem cell longevity. CR may also have a role in maintaining low levels of p16ink4a, a tumor suppressor protein, thus reducing the risk of cancer and promoting proliferation of stem cells. Oncogenesis is countered by loss of PTEN which elicits a p53-dependent prosenescence response to decrease tumorigenesis