Astrocyte elevated gene-1 induces protective autophagy

Astrocyte-elevated gene-1 (AEG-1) expression increases in multiple cancers and plays a crucial role in oncogenic transformation and angiogenesis, which are essential components in tumor cell development, growth, and progression to metastasis. Moreover, AEG-1 directly contributes to resistance to che...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2010-12, Vol.107 (51), p.22243-22248
Hauptverfasser: Bhutia, Sujit K., Kegelman, Timothy P., Das, Swadesh K., Azab, Belal, Su, Zhao-zhong, Lee, Seok-Geun, Sarkar, Devanand, Fisher, Paul B., Cavenee, Webster K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Astrocyte-elevated gene-1 (AEG-1) expression increases in multiple cancers and plays a crucial role in oncogenic transformation and angiogenesis, which are essential components in tumor cell development, growth, and progression to metastasis. Moreover, AEG-1 directly contributes to resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs, another important hallmark of aggressive cancers. In the present study, we document that AEG-1 mediates protective autophagy, an important regulator of cancer survival under metabolic stress and resistance to apoptosis, which may underlie its significant cancer-promoting properties. AEG-1 induces noncanonical autophagy involving an increase in expression of ATG5. AEG-1 decreases the ATP/AMP ratio, resulting in diminished cellular metabolism and activation of AMP kinase, which induces AMPK/mammalian target of rapamycin-dependent autophagy. Inhibition of AMPK by siAMPK or compound C decreases expression of ATG5, ultimately attenuating AEG-1—induced autophagy. AEG-1 protects normal cells from serum starvation-induced death through protective autophagy, and inhibition of AEG-1—induced autophagy results in serum starvation-induced cell death. We also show that AEG-1—mediated chemoresistance is because of protective autophagy and inhibition of AEG-1 results in a decrease in protective autophagy and chemosensitization of cancer cells. In summary, the present study reveals a previously unknown aspect of AEG-1 function by identifying it as a potential regulator of protective autophagy, an important feature of AEG-1 that may contribute to its tumor-promoting properties.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1009479107