Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Division of Genome Biology, Science for Life Laboratory, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Cell Death Differ. 2020 Mar;27(3):1134-1153. doi: 10.1038/s41418-019-0403-9. Epub 2019 Aug 14.
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved process that captures aberrant intracellular proteins and/or damaged organelles for delivery to lysosomes, with implications for cellular and organismal homeostasis, aging and diverse pathologies, including cancer. During cancer development, autophagy may play both tumour-supporting and tumour-suppressing roles. Any relationships of autophagy to the established oncogene-induced replication stress (RS) and the ensuing DNA damage response (DDR)-mediated anti-cancer barrier in early tumorigenesis remain to be elucidated. Here, assessing potential links between autophagy, RS and DDR, we found that autophagy is enhanced in both early and advanced stages of human urinary bladder and prostate tumorigenesis. Furthermore, a high-content, single-cell-level microscopy analysis of human cellular models exposed to diverse genotoxic insults showed that autophagy is enhanced in cells that experienced robust DNA damage, independently of the cell-cycle position. Oncogene- and drug-induced RS triggered first DDR and later autophagy. Unexpectedly, genetic inactivation of autophagy resulted in RS, despite cellular retention of functional mitochondria and normal ROS levels. Moreover, recovery from experimentally induced RS required autophagy to support DNA synthesis. Consistently, RS due to the absence of autophagy could be partly alleviated by exogenous supply of deoxynucleosides. Our results highlight the importance of autophagy for DNA synthesis, suggesting that autophagy may support cancer progression, at least in part, by facilitating tumour cell survival and fitness under replication stress, a feature shared by most malignancies. These findings have implications for better understanding of the role of autophagy in tumorigenesis, as well as for attempts to manipulate autophagy as an anti-tumour therapeutic strategy.
自噬是一种进化上保守的过程,它可以捕获异常的细胞内蛋白质和/或受损的细胞器,并将其递送至溶酶体,这对细胞和机体的稳态、衰老和多种病理学,包括癌症,都有影响。在癌症发展过程中,自噬可能发挥肿瘤支持和肿瘤抑制作用。自噬与已建立的癌基因诱导的复制应激(RS)和随后的 DNA 损伤反应(DDR)介导的早期肿瘤发生中的抗癌屏障之间的任何关系仍有待阐明。在这里,我们评估了自噬、RS 和 DDR 之间的潜在联系,发现自噬在人类膀胱癌和前列腺肿瘤发生的早期和晚期都增强了。此外,对暴露于多种遗传毒性物质的人类细胞模型进行的高内涵、单细胞水平显微镜分析表明,自噬在经历强烈 DNA 损伤的细胞中增强,而与细胞周期位置无关。癌基因和药物诱导的 RS 引发了 DDR,随后引发了自噬。出乎意料的是,尽管细胞保留了功能线粒体和正常的 ROS 水平,但自噬的遗传失活导致了 RS。此外,实验诱导的 RS 的恢复需要自噬来支持 DNA 合成。一致地,由于自噬的缺失而导致的 RS 可以通过外源性提供脱氧核苷来部分缓解。我们的研究结果强调了自噬对 DNA 合成的重要性,表明自噬可能通过促进肿瘤细胞在复制应激下的存活和适应性,至少部分支持癌症进展,这是大多数恶性肿瘤的共同特征。这些发现对更好地理解自噬在肿瘤发生中的作用以及试图将自噬作为一种抗肿瘤治疗策略进行操纵具有重要意义。