Open Access
Open access
Aging Cell, volume 21, issue 11

Autophagy activation can partially rescue proteasome dysfunction‐mediated cardiac toxicity

Eleni-Dimitra Papanagnou 1
S. Gumeni 1
Aimilia D. Sklirou 1
Alexandra Rafeletou 1
Evangelos Terpos 2
Kleoniki Keklikoglou 3, 4
Efstathios Kastritis 2
Kimon Stamatelopoulos 2
Gerasimos P. Sykiotis 5
Meletios A. Dimopoulos 2
Show full list: 11 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-10-19
Journal: Aging Cell
scimago Q1
SJR2.904
CiteScore14.4
Impact factor8
ISSN14749718, 14749726
PubMed ID:  36259256
Cell Biology
Aging
Abstract
The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and its functional interplay with other proteostatic and/or mitostatic modules are crucial for cell viability, especially in post-mitotic cells like cardiomyocytes, which are constantly exposed to proteotoxic, metabolic, and mechanical stress. Consistently, treatment of multiple myeloma patients with therapeutic proteasome inhibitors may induce cardiac failure; yet the effects promoted by heart-targeted proteasome dysfunction are not completely understood. We report here that heart-targeted proteasome knockdown in the fly experimental model results in increased proteome instability and defective mitostasis, leading to disrupted cardiac activity, systemic toxicity, and reduced longevity. These phenotypes were partially rescued by either heart targeted- or by dietary restriction-mediated activation of autophagy. Supportively, activation of autophagy by Rapamycin or Metformin administration in flies treated with proteasome inhibitors reduced proteome instability, partially restored mitochondrial function, mitigated cardiotoxicity, and improved flies' longevity. These findings suggest that autophagic inducers represent a novel promising intervention against proteasome inhibitor-induced cardiovascular complications.
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