Neferine, is not inducer but blocker for macroautophagic flux targeting on lysosome malfunction

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Abstract

Neferine, an alkaloid isolated from Lotus seeds, displays multiple pharmacological effects that counter cancer, oxidants, and arrhythmia. It was initially identified as a strong inducer for macroautophagy in cancer cells by suppressing AMPK/mTOR signaling. In this study, we found that autophagy signaling was inhibited in the condition of neferine treatment. Exposure to neferine resulted in the accumulation of LC3-II and an associated adaptor protein, p62/SQSTM1. Knockdown of ATG5 failed to reduce the accumulation of LC3-II induced by neferine. The electron microscopy (EM) images showed that neferine induce accumulation of multi-vesicle bodies (MVB) and failure of lysosome maturation. Moreover, exposure to neferine reduced maturation of cathepsin D and impaired the degradation of autophagic and phagocytic cargos. Rather than stimulate autophagic flux, the data indicate that neferine impaired lysosomes to block degradation within phagolysosomes.

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Xu, T., Singh, D., Liu, J., Li, H., Peng, S., Rizzolo, L. J., & Wang, S. B. (2018). Neferine, is not inducer but blocker for macroautophagic flux targeting on lysosome malfunction. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 495(1), 1516–1521. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2017.11.169

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