AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how the Atg1 gene influences autophagic cell death (ACD) in a model organism, Dictyostelium, highlighting its genetic advantages and unique requirements for inducing ACD.
  • Atg1 is shown to protect cells during initial stress from starvation and cAMP, but is also essential for the subsequent step leading to ACD upon exposing cells to the differentiation factor DIF-1.
  • The findings suggest that while Atg1 supports cell survival initially, it ultimately allows ACD to occur, emphasizing the complex roles of autophagy in these processes and urging more research into different signals that trigger ACD.

Article Abstract

We investigated the role of Atg1 in autophagic cell death (ACD) in a Dictyostelium monolayer model. The model is especially propitious, not only because of genetic tractability and absence of apoptosis machinery, but also because induction of ACD requires two successive exogenous signals, first the combination of starvation and cAMP, second the differentiation factor DIF-1. This enables one to analyze separately first-signal-induced autophagy and subsequent second-signal-induced ACD. We used mutants of atg1, a gene that plays an essential role in the initiation of autophagy. Upon starvation/cAMP, in contrast to parental cells, atg1 mutant cells showed irreversible lesions, clearly establishing a protective role for Atg1. Upon subsequent exposure to DIF-1 or to more ACD-specific second signals, starved parental cells progressed to ACD, but starved atg1 mutant cells did not, showing that Atg1 was required for ACD. Thus, in the same cells Atg1 was required in two apparently opposite ways, upon first-signaling for cell survival and upon second-signaling for ACD. Our findings strongly suggest that Atg1, thus presumably autophagy, protects the cells from starvation-induced cell death, allowing subsequent induction of ACD by the second signal. ACD is therefore not only "with" autophagy (since it showed signs of autophagy throughout), but is also "allowed by" autophagy. This does not exclude a role for autophagy also after second signaling. These results may account for discrepancies reported in the literature, encourage searches for second signals in different developmental models of ACD, and incite caution in autophagy-related therapeutic attempts.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/auto.7.5.14957DOI Listing

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