Chaperone-mediated autophagy protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxic-cell death.

Am J Physiol Cell Physiol

Division of Basic Biomedical Sciences, Sanford School of Medicine, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota.

Published: November 2022

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Article Abstract

Chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) is a chaperone-dependent process of selective cytosolic protein turnover that targets specific proteins to lysosomes for degradation. Enhancing protein degradation mechanisms has been shown to be beneficial in multiple models of cardiac disease, including myocardial infarction (MI) and ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. However, the causal role of CMA in cardiomyocyte injury and death is largely unknown. Hypoxia is an important contributor to both MI and I/R damage, which are major, precedent causes of heart failure. Upregulating CMA was hypothesized to protect against hypoxia-induced cardiomyocyte death. Lysosome-associated membrane protein 2a () overexpression and knockdown were used to causally study CMA's role in hypoxically stressed cardiomyocytes. LAMP2a protein levels were used as both a primary indicator and driver of CMA function. Hypoxic stress was stimulated by CoCl treatment, which increased LAMP2a protein levels (+1.4-fold) and induced cardiomyocyte apoptosis (+3.2-4.0-fold). siRNA knockdown (-3.2-fold) of control cardiomyocytes increased apoptosis (+1.8-fold) suggesting that loss of CMA is detrimental for cardiomyocyte survival. However, there was neither an additive nor a synergistic effect on cell death when -silenced cells were treated with CoCl. Conversely, overexpression (+3.0-fold) successfully reduced hypoxia-induced apoptosis by ∼50%. LAMP2a was also significantly increased (+1.7-fold) in ischemic heart failure patient samples, similar to hypoxically stressed cardiomyocytes. The failing ischemic hearts may have had insufficient CMA activation. To our knowledge, this study for the first time establishes a protective role for CMA (via overexpression) against hypoxia-induced cardiomyocyte loss and reveals the intriguing possibility that CMA activation may offer a cardioprotective treatment for ischemic heart disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9829466PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00369.2021DOI Listing

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