Rami Abdelhaq, Kögel Donat
Institute of Cellular and Molecular Anatomy (Anatomie III), Centre for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Clinics, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Autophagy. 2008 May;4(4):422-6. doi: 10.4161/auto.5778. Epub 2008 Feb 23.
Autophagy is a homeostatic cellular process required for the recycling of proteins and damaged organelles, and in most scenarios is believed to promote cell survival. However, there is accumulating evidence that under certain pathological situations, autophagy can also trigger and mediate programmed cell death (type II death). Despite the well-established pathophysiological role of apoptosis (type I cell death) in post-ischemic neuron death, there is now increasing interest whether alternative types of programmed cell death might be involved in regulation of neuronal death after both global and focal cerebral ischemia. Initial studies demonstrating the involvement of lysosomal proteases of the cathepsin family in neuron death after global ischemia already had suggested that this type of cell death may occur in an autophagy-dependent manner. Recently it was also shown that focal ischemia is associated with potently enhanced expression of the autophagy regulator Beclin 1 and subcellular redistribution of the autophagic marker LC3 to vacuolic structures in ischemic neurons. Increasing evidence suggests that the effects of autophagy are highly contextual. An insufficient autophagic response might render cells more susceptible to stress conditions whereas on the other hand prolonged overactivation of autophagy can lead to a complete self digestion of the cell. The extent of autophagy may represent a master switch between cell survival and cell death, and it will be of fundamental importance to dissect whether autophagy is primarily a strategy for survival or whether autophagy can also be a part of a cell death program and thus contribute to cell death after cerebral ischemia. A profound understanding of the biological effects and the mechanisms underlying ischemia-induced autophagy in neurons might be helpful in seeking effective new treatments for cerebral ischemia.
自噬是一种细胞稳态过程,是蛋白质和受损细胞器循环利用所必需的,在大多数情况下被认为可促进细胞存活。然而,越来越多的证据表明,在某些病理情况下,自噬也可触发并介导程序性细胞死亡(II型死亡)。尽管凋亡(I型细胞死亡)在缺血后神经元死亡中的病理生理作用已得到充分确立,但现在人们越来越关注在全脑和局灶性脑缺血后,其他类型的程序性细胞死亡是否可能参与神经元死亡的调节。最初的研究表明,组织蛋白酶家族的溶酶体蛋白酶参与全脑缺血后的神经元死亡,这已经提示这种类型的细胞死亡可能以自噬依赖的方式发生。最近还发现,局灶性缺血与自噬调节因子Beclin 1的表达显著增强以及自噬标志物LC3在缺血神经元中空泡结构的亚细胞重新分布有关。越来越多的证据表明,自噬的作用高度依赖于具体情况。自噬反应不足可能使细胞更容易受到应激条件的影响,而另一方面,自噬的长期过度激活可导致细胞完全自我消化。自噬的程度可能代表细胞存活与细胞死亡之间的一个主要开关,弄清楚自噬主要是一种生存策略还是也可以成为细胞死亡程序的一部分并因此导致脑缺血后的细胞死亡,将具有至关重要的意义。深入了解缺血诱导的神经元自噬的生物学效应及其潜在机制,可能有助于寻找有效的脑缺血新治疗方法。