15 research outputs found
Is autophagy the key mechanism by which the sphingolipid rheostat controls the cell fate decision?
Sphingolipids are major constituents of biological membrane and some of them behave as second messengers involved in the cell fate decision. Ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) constitute a rheostat system in which ceramide promotes cell death and S1P increases cell survival. We have shown that both sphingolipids are able to trigger autophagy with opposing outcomes on cell survival. Here we discuss and speculate on the diverging functions of the autophagic pathways induced by ceramide and S1P, respectively
The primary cilium protein folliculin is part of the autophagy signaling pathway to regulate epithelial cell size in response to fluid flow
Autophagy is a conserved molecular pathway directly involved in the degradation and recycling of intracellular components. Autophagy is associated with a response to stress situations, such as nutrients deficit, chemical toxicity, mechanical stress or microbial host defense. We have recently shown that primary cilium-dependent autophagy is important to control kidney epithelial cell size in response to fluid flow induced shear stress. Here we show that the ciliary protein folliculin (FLCN) actively participates to the signaling cascade leading to the stimulation of fluid flow-dependent autophagy upstream of the cell size regulation in HK2 kidney epithelial cells. The knockdown of FLCN induces a shortening of the primary cilium, inhibits the activation of AMPK and the recruitment of the autophagy protein ATG16L1 at the primary cilium. Altogether, our results suggest that FLCN is essential in the dialog between autophagy and the primary cilium in epithelial cells to integrate shear stress-dependent signaling
Régulation de l'expression et caractérisation d'un nouveau partenaire de la protéine prion cellulaire dans la lignée leucémique promyélocytaire humaine NB4
Les maladies Ă prions sont des pathologies neurodĂ©gĂ©nĂ©ratives caractĂ©risĂ©es par l'accumulation d'agrĂ©gats de protĂ©ine prion scrapie PrPsc au niveau du systĂšme nerveux central des individus atteints. Selon la thĂ©orie dĂ©fendue par S. B. Prusiner, cette protĂ©ine dĂ©riverait, par changement conformationnel, d'une protĂ©ine ubiquiste codĂ©e par tout individu sain : la protĂ©ine prion cellulaire PrPc. De plus, la conversion de la PrPc en PrPsc serait catalysĂ©e par la PrPsc elle-mĂȘme. Pouvoir rĂ©duire voire mĂȘme bloquer la synthĂšse de la PrPc et/ou empĂȘcher sa conversion en PrPsc est donc primordial pour traiter les maladies Ă prions...Prion diseases are neurodegenerative disorders characterized by the accumulation of scrapie prion protein PrPsc aggregates in the central nervous system. According to the theory developed by S. B. Prusiner, the scrapie prion protein PrPsc could derive from the ubiquitously-expressed normal prion protein PrPc, through a conformational modification. In addition, the conversion of PrPc into PrPsc could be under the control of PrPsc itself. Down-regulating or blocking PrPc synthesis, and/or stopping its conversion into PrPsc, is therefore of crucial importance to treat prion diseases...PARIS5-BU Saints-PĂšres (751062109) / SudocSudocFranceF
Autophagy signaling and the cogwheels of cancer.
The downregulation of macroautophagy observed in cancer cells is associated with tumor progression. The regulation of macroautophagy by signaling pathways overlaps with the control of cell growth, proliferation, cell survival and death. Several tumor suppressor genes (PTEN, TSC2 and p53) involved in the mTOR signaling network have been shown to stimulate autophagy. In contrast, the oncoproteins involved in this network have the opposite effect. These findings, together with the discovery that haploinsufficiency of the tumor suppressor beclin 1 promotes tumorigenesis in various tissues in transgenic mice, give credibility to the idea that autophagy is a tumor suppressor mechanism. The induction of macroautophagy by cancer treatments may also contribute to cell eradication. However, cancer cells sometimes mobilize autophagic capacities in response to various stimuli without a fatal outcome, suggesting that they can also exploit macroautophagy for their own benefit
Evolving views in prion glycosylation: functional and pathological implications
International audiencePrion diseases form a group of neurodegenerative disorders with the unique feature of being transmissible. These diseases involve a pathogenic protein, called PrP(Sc) for the scrapie isoform of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) which is an abnormally-folded counterpart of PrP(C). Many questions remain unresolved concerning the function of PrP(C) and the mechanisms underlying prion replication, transmission and neurodegeneration. PrP(C) is a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored glycoprotein expressed at the cell surface of neurons and other cell types. PrP(C) may be present as distinct isoforms depending on proteolytic processing (full length and truncated), topology(GPI-anchored, transmembrane or soluble) and glycosylation (non- mono- and di-glycosylated). The present review focuses on the implications of PrP(C) glycosylation as to the function of the normal protein, the cellular pathways of conversion into PrP(Sc), the diversity of prion strains and the related selective neuronal targeting
Is autophagy the key mechanism by which the sphingolipid rheostat controls the cell fate decision?
Sphingolipids are major constituents of biological membrane and some of them behave as second messengers involved in the cell fate decision. Ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) constitute a rheostat system in which ceramide promotes cell death and S1P increases cell survival. We have shown that both sphingolipids are able to trigger autophagy with opposing outcomes on cell survival. Here we discuss and speculate on the diverging functions of the autophagic pathways induced by ceramide and S1P, respectively
Regulation of autophagy by sphingosine kinase 1 and its role in cell survival during nutrient starvation.
The sphingolipid ceramide induces macroautophagy (here called autophagy) and cell death with autophagic features in cancer cells. Here we show that overexpression of sphingosine kinase 1 (SK1), an enzyme responsible for the production of sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), in MCF-7 cells stimulates autophagy by increasing the formation of LC3-positive autophagosomes and the rate of proteolysis sensitive to the autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine. Autophagy was blocked in the presence of dimethylsphingosine, an inhibitor of SK activity, and in cells expressing a catalytically inactive form of SK1. In SK1(wt)-overexpressing cells, however, autophagy was not sensitive to fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of ceramide synthase. In contrast to ceramide-induced autophagy, SK1(S1P)-induced autophagy is characterized by (i) the inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling independently of the Akt/protein kinase B signaling arm and (ii) the lack of robust accumulation of the autophagy protein Beclin 1. In addition, nutrient starvation induced both the stimulation of autophagy and SK activity. Knocking down the expression of the autophagy protein Atg7 or that of SK1 by siRNA abolished starvation-induced autophagy and increased cell death with apoptotic hallmarks. In conclusion, these results show that SK1(S1P)-induced autophagy protects cells from death with apoptotic features during nutrient starvation
Fumonisin-exposure impairs age-related ecological succession of bacterial species in weaned pig gut microbiota
Pigs are highly affected by dietary mycotoxin contamination and particularly by fumonisin. The effects of fumonisin on pig intestinal health are well documented, but little is known regarding its impact on gut microbiota. We investigate the effects of the fumonisin (FB1, 12 mg/kg feed) on the fecal microbiota of piglets (n = 6) after 0, 8, 15, 22, and 29 days of exposure. A control group of six piglets received a diet free of FB1. Bacterial community diversity, structure and taxonomic composition were carried out by V3â»V4 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Exposure to FB1 decreases the diversity index, and shifts and constrains the structure and the composition of the bacterial community. This takes place as early as after 15 days of exposure and is at a maximum after 22 days of exposure. Compared to control, FB1 alters the ecological succession of fecal microbiota species toward higher levels of Lactobacillus and lower levels of the Lachnospiraceae and Veillonellaceae families, and particularly OTUs (Operational Taxonomic Units) of the genera Mitsuokella, Faecalibacterium and Roseburia. In conclusion, FB1 shifts and constrains age-related evolution of microbiota. The direct or indirect contribution of FB1 microbiota alteration in the global host response to FB1 toxicity remains to be investigated