| Literature DB >> 25140315 |
Yuan Li1, Shaogui Wang2, Hong-Min Ni1, Heqing Huang3, Wen-Xing Ding1.
Abstract
Autophagy is a genetically programmed, evolutionarily conserved intracellular degradation pathway involved in the trafficking of long-lived proteins and cellular organelles to the lysosome for degradation to maintain cellular homeostasis. Alcohol consumption leads to injury in various tissues and organs including liver, pancreas, heart, brain, and muscle. Emerging evidence suggests that autophagy is involved in alcohol-induced tissue injury. Autophagy serves as a cellular protective mechanism against alcohol-induced tissue injury in most tissues but could be detrimental in heart and muscle. This review summarizes current knowledge about the role of autophagy in alcohol-induced injury in different tissues/organs and its potential molecular mechanisms as well as possible therapeutic targets based on modulation of autophagy.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25140315 PMCID: PMC4124834 DOI: 10.1155/2014/498491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1The major molecular pathways and targets in alcohol-induced autophagy changes in hepatocytes. Ethanol modulates autophagy through multiple mechanisms. (1) Ethanol-induced autophagy requires ethanol metabolism and ROS production. ROS may activate autophagy by further suppressing mTOR. (2) Alcohol (ethanol) consumption inhibits methionine synthase (MS) resulting in decreased methionine and S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) levels. Methionine and SAM inhibit autophagy by activating mTORC1. Thus it is possible that ethanol-induced decreased methionine and SAM will inhibit mTORC1 resulting in autophagy activation although this has not been directly tested in the alcohol model (?). (3) Ethanol may also suppress Akt through the upregulation of PTEN and in turn inhibits mTORC1 to induce autophagy. (4) Ethanol-induced impaired AMPK and Akt may counteract each other on mTOR, and impaired Akt plays a dominant role toward the inhibition of mTOR. (5) Decreased Akt can also trigger autophagy through the activation of FoxO3 by promoting the dephosphorylation and nuclear retention of FoxO3. Increased NADH/NAD+ ratio through ethanol metabolism inhibits Sirt1 activity resulting in increased acetylated FoxO3. Increased acetylated FoxO3 may decrease FoxO3-mediated expression of autophagy genes, which can be abolished by resveratrol that activates Sirt1. (6) Other AMPK-independent pathways remain to be determined in alcohol-induced autophagy (?). (7) mTORC1 negatively regulates autophagy through direct phosphorylation of ULK1 to inactivate ULK1 complex activity. ULK1 directly phosphorylates Beclin-1 and enhances VPS34 kinase activity to promote autophagy. AMPK positively regulates autophagy by suppressing mTORC1 activity through phosphorylation of TSC2 and raptor and by promoting VPS34 kinase activity through phosphorylation of Beclin-1. Activated VPS34 increases the production of phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P), which promotes the biogenesis of autophagosomes although the activities of ULK1 and VPS34 after alcohol exposure still remain to be determined (?).
Summary of in vivo studies on autophagy in alcohol-induced tissue injury.
| Model | Level of autophagy | Role of autophagy | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | Acute | Activated | Protective | Ding et al., 2010 [ |
| Impaired∗ | Protective | Wu et al., 2012 [ | ||
| Chronic | Activated | Protective | Lin et al., 2013 [ | |
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| Pancreas | Chronic | Impaired | Protective | Fortunato et al., 2009 [ |
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| Heart | Acute | Activated∗ | Detrimental | Ge et al., 2011 [ |
| Chronic | Activated∗ | Detrimental | Ge and Ren, 2012 [ | |
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| Brain | Acute | Activated | Protective | Chen et al., 2012 [ |
| Chronic | Impaired | Protective | Pla et al., 2014 [ | |
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| Skeletal muscle | Chronic | Activated | Detrimental | Thapaliya et al., 2014 [ |
Note: ∗autophagy flux assay is lacked.
Figure 2Differential roles of autophagy in alcohol-induced multitissue injury. Emerging evidence now indicates that alcohol consumption can either activate or impair autophagy as either a cellular adaptive/compensatory protective mechanism or as a detrimental factor contributing to alcohol-induced injury in various tissues/organs. In liver, it seems that alcohol metabolism through ADH and Cyp2E1 is required for autophagy activation. Acute alcohol treatment also induces FoxO3-mediated autophagy. Autophagy seems to selectively remove damaged mitochondria and excess lipid droplets and in turn attenuate alcohol-induced steatosis and liver injury. In pancreas, alcohol can induce ER stress and also decrease LAMP2 in the presence of endotoxin LPS, which leads to impaired autophagy resulting in pancreatitis. It is not known whether alcohol consumption would affect VMP1 and the ratio of CatB (cathepsin B)/CatL (cathepsin L), two important factors that regulate autophagy and pancreatitis, respectively. In heart, alcohol may activate autophagy through activating AMPK and inactivating mTOR. Autophagy activation seems to contribute to alcohol-induced heart dysfunction. In muscle, metabolism of alcohol to acetaldehyde activates autophagy resulting in muscle loss. Whether alcohol-induced autophagy in muscle is mediated by mTOR is not clear. In brain, alcohol increases mTOR and impairs autophagy in the mouse cerebral cortex resulting in brain injury, which is TLR4 dependent. Together, it is clear that alcohol can affect the autophagy process and in turn regulate tissue injury in various tissues/organs.