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Autophagy promotes cell survival by maintaining NAD levels

Authors :
Tetsushi Kataura
Lucia Sedlackova
Elsje G. Otten
Ruchika Kumari
David Shapira
Filippo Scialo
Rhoda Stefanatos
Kei-ichi Ishikawa
George Kelly
Elena Seranova
Congxin Sun
Dorothea Maetzel
Niall Kenneth
Sergey Trushin
Tong Zhang
Eugenia Trushina
Charles C. Bascom
Ryan Tasseff
Robert J. Isfort
John E. Oblong
Satomi Miwa
Michael Lazarou
Rudolf Jaenisch
Masaya Imoto
Shinji Saiki
Manolis Papamichos-Chronakis
Ravi Manjithaya
Oliver D.K. Maddocks
Alberto Sanz
Sovan Sarkar
Viktor I. Korolchuk
Kataura, T.
Sedlackova, L.
Otten, E. G.
Kumari, R.
Shapira, D.
Scialo, F.
Stefanatos, R.
Ishikawa, K. -I.
Kelly, G.
Seranova, E.
Sun, C.
Maetzel, D.
Kenneth, N.
Trushin, S.
Zhang, T.
Trushina, E.
Bascom, C. C.
Tasseff, R.
Isfort, R. J.
Oblong, J. E.
Miwa, S.
Lazarou, M.
Jaenisch, R.
Imoto, M.
Saiki, S.
Papamichos-Chronakis, M.
Manjithaya, R.
Maddocks, O. D. K.
Sanz, A.
Sarkar, S.
Korolchuk, V. I.
Source :
Developmental cell. 57(22)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Autophagy is an essential catabolic process that promotes the clearance of surplus or damaged intracellular components. Loss of autophagy in age-related human pathologies contributes to tissue degeneration through a poorly understood mechanism. Here, we identify an evolutionarily conserved role of autophagy from yeast to humans in the preservation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) levels, which are critical for cell survival. In respiring mouse fibroblasts with autophagy deficiency, loss of mitochondrial quality control was found to trigger hyperactivation of stress responses mediated by NADases of PARP and Sirtuin families. Uncontrolled depletion of the NAD(H) pool by these enzymes ultimately contributed to mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cell death. Pharmacological and genetic interventions targeting several key elements of this cascade improved the survival of autophagy-deficient yeast, mouse fibroblasts, and human neurons. Our study provides a mechanistic link between autophagy and NAD metabolism and identifies targets for interventions in human diseases associated with autophagic, lysosomal, and mitochondrial dysfunction.

Details

ISSN :
18781551
Volume :
57
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc508f76873fc202b33a7371d31c3b20