ISG15 Deregulates Autophagy in Genotoxin-treated Ataxia Telangiectasia Cells

Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a cerebellar neurodegenerative disorder; however, the basis for the neurodegeneration in A-T is not well established. Lesions in the ubiquitin and autophagy pathways are speculated to contribute to the neurodegeneration in other neurological diseases and may have a rol...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2013-01, Vol.288 (4), p.2388-2402
Hauptverfasser: Desai, Shyamal D., Reed, Ryan E., Babu, Shilka, Lorio, Eric A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a cerebellar neurodegenerative disorder; however, the basis for the neurodegeneration in A-T is not well established. Lesions in the ubiquitin and autophagy pathways are speculated to contribute to the neurodegeneration in other neurological diseases and may have a role in A-T neurodegeneration. Our recent studies revealed that the constitutively elevated ISG15 pathway impairs targeted proteasome-mediated protein degradation in A-T cells. Here, we demonstrate that the basal autophagy pathway is activated in the ubiquitin pathway-compromised A-T cells. We also show that genotoxic stress triggers aberrant degradation of the proteasome and autophagy substrates (autophagic flux) in A-T cells. Inhibition of autophagy at an early stage using 3-methyladenine blocked UV-induced autophagic flux in A-T cells. On the other hand, bafilomycin A1, which inhibits autophagy at a late stage, failed to block UV-induced autophagic flux, suggesting that overinduction of autophagy may underlie aberrant autophagic flux in A-T cells. The ISG15-specific shRNA that restored proteasome function restores autophagic function in A-T cells. These findings suggest that autophagy compensates for the ISG15-dependent ablation of proteasome-mediated protein degradation in A-T cells. Genotoxic stress overactivates this compensatory mechanism, triggering aberrant autophagic flux in A-T cells. Supporting the model, we show that autophagy is activated in the brain tissues of human A-T patients. This highlights a plausible causal contribution of a novel “ISG15 proteinopathy” in A-T neuronal cell death. Background: Aberrant activation of autophagy (proteinopathy) leads to neurodegeneration in various neurological disorders. Results: Compensatory basal autophagy is activated, and genotoxins deregulate autophagy in the ubiquitin pathway-compromised ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) cells. Conclusion: Deregulation of autophagy is due to the elevated expression of ISG15 in A-T cells. Significance: Results highlight a causal contribution of a novel “ISG15 proteinopathy” in A-T neurodegeneration.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M112.403832