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Review
. 2007 Jan-Feb;3(1):28-31.
doi: 10.4161/auto.3269. Epub 2007 Jan 3.

Role of autophagy in cancer: management of metabolic stress

Affiliations
Review

Role of autophagy in cancer: management of metabolic stress

Shengkan Jin et al. Autophagy. 2007 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Human breast, ovarian, and prostate tumors display allelic loss of the essential autophagy gene beclin1 with high frequency, and an increase in the incidence of tumor formation is observed in beclin1(+/-) mutant mice. These findings suggest a role for beclin1 and autophagy in tumor suppression; however, the mechanism by which this occurs has been unclear. Autophagy is a bulk degradation process whereby organelles and cytoplasm are engulfed and targeted to lysosomes for proteolysis,(1,2) There is evidence that autophagy sustains cell survival during nutrient deprivation through catabolism, but also that autophagy is a means of achieving cell death when executed to completion. If or how either of these diametrically opposing functions proposed for autophagy may be related to tumor suppression is unknown. We found that metabolic stress is a potent trigger of apoptotic cell death, defects in which enable long-term survival that is dependent on autophagy both in vitro and in tumors in vivo.(3) These findings raise the conundrum whereby inactivation of a survival pathway (autophagy) promotes tumorigenesis. Interestingly, when cells with defects in apoptosis are denied autophagy, this creates the inability to tolerate metabolic stress, reduces cellular fitness, and activates a necrotic pathway to cell death. This necrosis in tumors is associated with inflammation and enhancement of tumor growth, due to the survival of a small population of surviving, but injured, cells in a microenvironment that favors oncogenesis. Thus, by sustaining metabolism through autophagy during periods of metabolic stress, cells can limit energy depletion, cellular damage, and cell death by necrosis, which may explain how autophagy can prevent cancer, and how loss of a survival function can be tumorigenic.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Role of apoptosis and autophagy in the response to metabolic stress in tumorigenesis. Excessive metabolic stress induces organelle, protein, and DNA damage that potently stimulate apoptosis. Apoptosis serves to eliminate potential damaged cells without induction of an inflammatory response. This apoptotic response severely limits tumorigenesis of immortal epithelial cells, with approximately one in a million cells eventually acquiring a stable genetic or epigenetic change after two to three months of selection in vivo that permits tumor growth., Defects in apoptosis, however, permit cells to survive metabolic stress in vitro, but also in vivo where autophagy localizes to hypoxic tumor regions.,,, Defects in apoptosis allow survival by autophagy, however, the protection from metabolic stress conferred by autophagy may be incomplete with the persistence of some tumor cells manifesting chromosome instability. Whereas defective apoptosis is sufficient to render immortal epithelial cells tumorigenic, the manifestation of chromosome instability is associated with, and may expedite, tumor evolution., Defects in autophagy caused by haploinsufficiency in beclin1 sensitize cells to metabolic stress most likely by amplifying cellular damage. The ability of autophagy to limit apoptosis is modest, if apparent at all, in the context of an intact apoptotic response. Although a slight increase in tumor incidence is observed in immortal epithelial cells with allelic loss of beclin1 and compromised autophagy, tumor growth is still due to clonal emergence. Tumorigenesis in this case may result from an increased mutation rate and escape from apoptosis arising from the manifestation of cellular damage. In contrast, defects in apoptosis and autophagy synergize to promote tumor growth. Impaired autophagy likely amplifies cellular damage, compromising viability by activating necrotic cell death. Induction of necrosis is less efficient than apoptosis and more potential tumor cells with unstable genomes survive that have the potential to multiply. Finally, necrosis stimulates inflammation that has the potential to substantially influence tumor growth by promoting angiogenesis and cell proliferation.

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