Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6493414 | Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology | 2018 | 48 Pages |
Abstract
Autophagy is a self-digestive pathway that helps to maintain cellular homeostasis, and many autophagy-related gene (ATG)s involved the regulation of the autophagy process. Ultraviolet light is a common stressor of skin, but it is unclear how autophagy is regulated after ultraviolet exposure in epidermal keratinocytes. Here, we found that the mRNAs of some key ATG genes such as ULK1, ATG5 and ATG7 exhibited significantly lower levels in the skin tissues of the face and chest with solar ultraviolet exposure, compared with perineal skin. Interestingly, UVB radiation down-regulated the expression of ULK1, ATG3 and ATG7, and it inhibited the autophagy flux via a mechanistic target of rapamycin (MTOR)-independent pathway in human keratinocytes. The inhibition of autophagy in UVB-treated keratinocytes cannot be restored by treatment with the MTOR-dependent autophagy inducer rapamycin. Importantly, UVB treatment perturbs the conversion of microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3)-I to LC3-II and LC3-II turnover in response to treatment with MTOR inhibitors (Torin 1 and pp242), as well as endoplasmic reticular stress (A23187 and tunicamycin), inositol pathway (L690,330) and autophagy inducers (resveratrol and STF62247). Our study demonstrates that UVB radiation down-regulates several key autophagy-related proteins and impairs the autophagy response in keratinocytes. This study demonstrates a linkage between autophagy and skin disorders associated with ultraviolet exposure.
Keywords
AMPKunc-51-like kinase 1E&Pp.i.mTORULK1tunicamycinATGSGK1LC3RSVAMP-activated protein kinaseROSAcridine orangeAutophagyUltravioletultraviolet BResveratrolMechanistic target of rapamycinmicrotubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3autophagy-related geneKeratinocyteHuman epidermal keratinocytesReactive oxygen species
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Bioengineering
Authors
Xu Chen, Li Li, Song Xu, Wenbo Bu, Kun Chen, Min Li, Heng Gu,