Sustained induction of autophagy enhances survival during prolonged starvation in newt cells

持续诱导自噬可提高蝾螈细胞在长期饥饿状态下的存活率

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作者:Md Mahmudul Hasan, Shinji Goto, Reiko Sekiya, Toshinori Hayashi, Tao-Sheng Li, Tsuyoshi Kawabata

Abstract

Salamanders demonstrate exceptional resistance to starvation, allowing them to endure extended periods without food in their natural habitats. Although autophagy, a process involving evolutionarily conserved proteins, promotes survival during food scarcity, the specific mechanism by which it contributes to the extreme starvation resistance in newt cells remains unexplored. Our study, using the newt species Pleurodeles waltl, reveals that newt primary fibroblasts maintain constant autophagy activation during prolonged cellular starvation. Unlike normal mammalian fibroblasts, where autophagosome formation increases during acute starvation but returns to baseline levels after extended periods, newt cells maintain elevated autophagosome numbers even 4 d after autophagy initiation, surpassing levels observed in nutrient-rich conditions. Unique P. waltl mTOR orthologs show reduced lysosomal localization compared with mammalian cells in both nutrient-rich and starved states. However, newt cells exhibit dephosphorylation of mTOR substrates under starvation conditions, similar to mammalian cells. These observations suggest that newts may have evolved a distinctive system to balance seemingly conflicting factors: high regenerative capacity and autophagy-mediated survival during starvation.

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