| Literature DB >> 34204653 |
Marcelo T Moura1, Laís B Latorraca1, Fabíola F Paula-Lopes1.
Abstract
Mammals face environmental stressors throughout their lifespan, which may jeopardize cellular homeostasis. Hence, these organisms have acquired mechanisms to cope with stressors by sensing, repairing the damage, and reallocating resources to increase the odds of long-term survival. Autophagy is a pro-survival lysosome-mediated cytoplasm degradation pathway for organelle and macromolecule recycling. Furthermore, autophagy efflux increases, and this pathway becomes idiosyncratic depending upon developmental and environmental contexts. Mammalian germ cells and preimplantation embryos are attractive models for dissecting autophagy due to their metastable phenotypes during differentiation and exposure to varying environmental cues. The aim of this review is to explore autophagy during mammalian gametogenesis, fertilization and preimplantation embryonic development by contemplating its physiological role during development, under key stressors, and within the scope of assisted reproduction technologies.Entities:
Keywords: ART; autophagic; cloning; embryogenesis; oogenesis; reproduction; reprogramming; spermatozoa
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34204653 PMCID: PMC8231133 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The mammalian autophagy pathway is a four-step process. Several environmental signals activate autophagy directly or indirectly, such as nutrient deprivation (e.g., amino acid depletion), DNA damage (p53-mediated transcription activation), developmental or environmental cues upstream of signaling pathways (e.g., adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase—AMPK), and mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) inhibitors (e.g., rapamycin). Autophagy initiation: cells exit homeostasis by inhibition the mTORC1 complex and induction of autophagy activating kinase 1/2 (ULK1/2) complex (formed by ULK1/2, autophagy-related protein 13—ATG13, PTK2/FAK family interacting protein of 200 kDa—FIP200, and Autophagy-related protein 101—ATG101 proteins) alongside type III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase complex (formed by autophagy and beclin 1 regulator 1—AMBRA1, BECLIN1, PI3K, Vacuolar protein sorting 34—VPS34, beclin 1-associated autophagy-related key regulator/autophagy-related protein 14—ATG14, mammalian homolog of yeast Vps15—P150). This activation forms an isolation membrane (phagophore) by sequestering part of a cellular membrane enclosing a fraction of the cytosol. The phagophore contains cargo such as organelles and/or macromolecules sequestered by adaptors such as sequestosome1 (p62/SQSTM1). Expansion: the phagophore elongates and involves the cargo. The cysteine peptidase/autophagy-related protein (ATG4), which is a component of the ubiquitin-like ATG8 (Light-chain 3 (LC3)) system (blue), converts LC3 into LC3-I by proteolytic cleavage at the C-terminus. Further, both autophagy-related protein 3 (ATG3) and autophagy-related protein 7 (ATG7) conjugate LC3-I with the lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). The LC3-I/PE aggregate anchored at the autophagosome membrane becomes LC3-II. Similarly, gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-associated proteins (GABARAPLs) are subject to proteolytic cleavage at the C-terminus by ATG4 and conjugated to lipids by ATG3/ATG7 for phagophore membrane binding. LC3-II and GABARAPL conjugates contribute to membrane elongation, cargo recognition, autophagosome edge closure, autophagosomal movement, and tethering to lysosomes. The ubiquitin-like autophagy-related protein 12 (ATG12) system also contributes to ATG8 (LC3 and GABARAPL) conjugation. It initiates with an ATG12 cleavage by ATG7 in an ATP-dependent manner. Furthermore, ATG12 associates with autophagy-related protein 10 (ATG10), thus forming another intermediate. Finally, ATG12 conjugates with autophagy-related protein 5 (ATG5) and the latter interacts with autophagy related 16 like 1 (ATG16L1). Furthermore, a dimeric ATG12-ATG5-ATG16L1 complex forms by ATG16L1 homodimerization. This dimer complex contributes to ATG8-lipid conjugations. Maturation: The phagophore becomes a double-membrane enclosed vesicle named autophagosome. Fusion: the autophagosome fuses with a lysosome and becomes an autolysosome that allows complete degradation of cargo and release of cellular building blocks (e.g., amino acids and lipids) in the cytosol. The autolysosome formation requires the lysosome membrane-enriched glycoprotein lysosomal associated membrane protein 2 (LAMP2). Stage-specific autophagy inhibitors were described. 3MA: 3-methyladenine.
Context-dependent roles of autophagy from gametogenesis to preimplantation embryonic development.
| Event | Physiological Role | Stress | ARTs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oogenesis | Required for mouse oogenesis (except for oocyte maturation) [ | Activated during oocyte aging [ | Contributes to oocyte survival after vitrification [ |
| Spermatogenesis | Required for testosterone production, sperm and acrosome formation, motility, and fertility [ | Activated during environmental stress [ | Activated by sperm cooling and freezing [ |
| Fertilization | Ongoing debate if it recycles sperm-borne mitochondria [ | - | - |
| Preimplantation embryonic development | Required for post-compactation embryogenesis in the mouse [ | Activated under environmental stress [ | Decreased or delayed activation in SCNT embryos [ |
ARTs: assisted reproductive technologies. SCNT: somatic cell nuclear transfer.
Figure 2Autophagy modulation on mammalian oogenesis and preimplantation embryonic development. (A) In vitro incubation of oocytes/embryos with rapamycin (RPM; mTOR inhibitor/autophagy inducer) or 3-methyladenine (3MA; Type III PI3K inhibitor/autophagy inhibitor). Green bar: stage-specific improvement in oocyte maturation (progression from germinal vesicle to metaphase II stage), oocyte competence (ability of an oocyte to give rise to a blastocyst), and preimplantation embryonic developmental potential at the pre-compactation (zygote to 4-cell) and post-compactation (beyond 4-cell) stages (increase in cleavage and blastocyst yields, respectively). Red bar: stage-specific decrease in oocyte maturation, oocyte competence, or embryonic developmental potential. Gray Bar: no observable effect. Black bar: not determined. (B) Schematic representation of mRNA levels for the autophagy genes autophagy-related protein 5 (ATG5) and autophagy-related protein 8 (ATG8/LC3) during preimplantation embryonic development in selected mammalian species. Black boxes highlight the embryonic genome activation (EGA) for each species (the EGA in cattle occurs in the eight-to-sixteen cell stage transition).
Figure 3Potential contextual roles of autophagy during mammalian development. Autophagy is required during preimplantation embryonic development (zygote to blastocyst; green arrow) but the impact of in vitro embryo culture remains unknown. Post-implantation development requires autophagy (blastocyst to birth; green arrow) albeit it remains unclear if more challenging conditions to full-term development (e.g., cloning, embryo cryopreservation or exposure to in vivo stress) require autophagy. Autophagy is required for in vivo gametogenesis (animal to gametes; green arrow), although the impact of oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM) and in vitro gametogenesis would be informative. Autophagy during fertilization (gametes to zygote; yellow arrow) and sperm remodeling remains controversial. An attractive opportunity to contribute to this discussion is to determine if in vitro fertilization (IVF), intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), and sperm preservation methods (cooling, freezing or lyophilization) affect fertilization and the associated processes. SCNT: somatic cell nuclear transfer.