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. 2010 Oct;6(7):971-3.
doi: 10.4161/auto.6.7.13099. Epub 2010 Oct 21.

Abnormal mitochondrial autophagy in nephropathic cystinosis

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Abnormal mitochondrial autophagy in nephropathic cystinosis

Poonam Sansanwal et al. Autophagy. 2010 Oct.

Abstract

Cystinosis, which is characterized by lysosomal accumulation of cystine in many tissues, was the first known storage disorder caused by defective metabolite export from the lysosome. The molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying nephropathic cystinosis, the most severe form, which exhibits generalized proximal tubular dysfunction and progressive renal failure, remain largely unknown. We used renal proximal tubular epithelial (RPTE) cells and fibroblasts from patients with three clinical variants of cystinosis: nephropathic, intermediate and ocular to explore the specific injury mechanism in nephropathic cystinosis. We demonstrate enhanced autophagy of mitochondria, increase in apoptosis and mitochondrial dysfunction in the nephropathic cystinosis phenotype. Furthermore, specific inhibition of autophagy results in significant attenuation of cell death in nephropathic cystinosis. This study provides ultrastructural and functional evidence of abnormal mitochondrial autophagy in nephropathic cystinosis, which may contribute to renal Fanconi syndrome and progressive renal injury.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A schematic view of the interplay between autophagy, abnormal mitochondria and cell death in cystinosis. Abnormal induction of autophagy, typically mitophagy, forces cells into a starvation mode leading to cell death; and renders cystine-laden lysosomes sensitive to lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) making it readily enter the apoptosis pathway. A potential block in autophagic flux, after autophagosome-lysosome fusion, remains to be elucidated. Preferential severe kidney damage in nephropathic cystinosis may be due to the tissue- and organ-specific injury effect of autophagy.

References

    1. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2010 Feb;21(2):272-83 - PubMed

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