XBP-1u suppresses autophagy by promoting the degradation of FoxO1 in cancer cells

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Abstract

Autophagy is activated to maintain cellular energy homeostasis in response to nutrient starvation. However, autophagy is not persistently activated, which is poorly understood at a mechanistic level. Here, we report that turnover of FoxO1 is involved in the dynamic autophagic process caused by glutamine starvation. X-box-binding protein-1u (XBP-1u) has a critical role in FoxO1 degradation by recruiting FoxO1 to the 20S proteasome. In addition, the phosphorylation of XBP-1u by extracellular regulated protein kinases1/2 (ERK1/2) on Ser61 and Ser176 was found to be critical for the increased interaction between XBP-1u and FoxO1 upon glutamine starvation. Furthermore, knockdown of XBP-1u caused the sustained level of FoxO1 and the persistent activation of autophagy, leading to a significant decrease in cell viability. Finally, the inverse correlation between XBP-1u and FoxO1 expression agrees well with the expression profiles observed in many human cancer tissues. Thus, our findings link the dynamic process of autophagy to XBP-1u-induced FoxO1 degradation. © 2013 IBCB, SIBS, CAS All rights reserved.

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Zhao, Y., Li, X., Cai, M. Y., Ma, K., Yang, J., Zhou, J., … Zhu, W. G. (2013). XBP-1u suppresses autophagy by promoting the degradation of FoxO1 in cancer cells. Cell Research, 23(4), 491–507. https://doi.org/10.1038/cr.2013.2

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