Proteasome malfunction activates the PPP3/calcineurin-TFEB-SQSTM1/p62 pathway to induce macroautophagy in the heart.

Journal: Autophagy
Published:
Abstract

Proteasome inhibition (PSMI) is known to activate macroautophagy (autophagy hereafter), but the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully delineated. Here we discuss our recent work identifying an important PPP3/calcineurin-TFEB-SQSTM1/p62 pathway in mediating activation of autophagy by PSMI, a compensatory process for the heart with proteasome malfunction. Through increasing PPP3/calcineurin activity and inhibiting MTOR signaling, PSMI promotes the dephosphorylation and thereby nuclear translocation of TFEB, resulting in transactivation of genes in the autophagic-lysosomal pathway (ALP) such as Mcoln1 and Sqstm1. We have discovered that SQSTM1 is required for not only induction of autophagy but also cardiac activation of TFEB by PSMI, unveiling a novel feedforward role for SQSTM1 in TFEB activation.

Authors
Huabo Su, Xuejun Wang