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Publication : Intracellular signaling in ER stress-induced autophagy in skeletal muscle cells.

First Author  Madaro L Year  2013
Journal  FASEB J Volume  27
Issue  5 Pages  1990-2000
PubMed ID  23388382 Mgi Jnum  J:197854
Mgi Id  MGI:5494793 Doi  10.1096/fj.12-215475
Citation  Madaro L, et al. (2013) Intracellular signaling in ER stress-induced autophagy in skeletal muscle cells. FASEB J 27(5):1990-2000
abstractText  Skeletal muscle remodeling in response to muscle disuse and unloading is known to be associated with so-called ER stress, which, in turn, activates autophagy and contributes to muscle atrophy. Different molecules are involved in ER stress-induced autophagy, among which PKCtheta has recently been described. In this study, we dissected both in vitro and in vivo ER stress-induced autophagy pathways in muscle. Using C2C12 muscle cells in culture, we demonstrated that PKC activation induced autophagy in the absence of ER stress. We further demonstrated that PKCtheta was strongly activated in cultured myoblasts and myotubes during ER stress induced by different stimuli, such as TG or TN treatment, and that it localized into Lc3-positive autophagic dots upon TG treatment. Neither Akt dephosphorylation nor Foxo or GSK3beta activation was observed in these conditions. Moreover, PKCtheta inhibition in myoblasts and myotubes prevented ER stress-induced Lc3 activation and autophagic dot formation, but not ER stress. In vivo, lack of PKCtheta prevented both food deprivation- and immobilization-induced autophagy and muscle atrophy, irrespective of Akt pathway inhibition. Taken together, these results demonstrate that PKCtheta functions as an ER stress sensor in skeletal muscle, required for ER-stress-dependent autophagy activation, and can be proposed as a novel molecular target to maintain muscle homeostasis in response to external stimuli, such as disuse and unloading, still allowing intracellular clearance.
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