| Literature DB >> 24434817 |
Sandro Huenchuguala1, Patricia Muñoz1, Patricio Zavala1, Mónica Villa1, Carlos Cuevas1, Ulises Ahumada1, Rebecca Graumann1, Beston F Nore2, Eduardo Couve3, Bengt Mannervik4, Irmgard Paris5, Juan Segura-Aguilar1.
Abstract
U373MG cells constitutively express glutathione S-transferase mu 2 (GSTM2) and exhibit (3)H-dopamine uptake, which is inhibited by 2 µM of nomifensine and 15 µM of estradiol. We generated a stable cell line (U373MGsiGST6) expressing an siRNA against GSTM2 that resulted in low GSTM2 expression (26% of wild-type U373MG cells). A significant increase in cell death was observed when U373MGsiGST6 cells were incubated with 50 µM purified aminochrome (18-fold increase) compared with wild-type cells. The incubation of U373MGsiGST6 cells with 75 µM aminochrome resulted in the formation of autophagic vacuoles containing undigested cellular components, as determined using transmission electron microscopy. A significant increase in autophagosomes was determined by measuring endogenous LC3-II, a significant decrease in cell death was observed in the presence of bafilomycin A 1, and a significant increase in cell death was observed in the presence of trehalose. A significant increase in LAMP2 immunostaining was observed, a significant decrease in bright red fluorescence of lysosomes with acridine orange was observed, and bafilomycin A 1 pretreatment reduced the loss of lysosome acidity. A significant increase in cell death was observed in the presence of lysosomal protease inhibitors. Aggregation of TUBA/α-tubulin (tubulin, α) and SQSTM1 protein accumulation were also observed. Moreover, a significant increase in the number of lipids droplets was observed compared with U373MG cells with normal expression of GSTM2. These results support the notion that GSTM2 is a protective enzyme against aminochrome toxicity in astrocytes and that aminochrome cell death in U373MGsiGST6 cells involves autophagic-lysosomal dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson disease; aminochrome; astrocytes; autophagy; dopamine; glutathione transferase; lysosome dysfunction; siRNA
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24434817 PMCID: PMC4091149 DOI: 10.4161/auto.27720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autophagy ISSN: 1554-8627 Impact factor: 16.016