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Autophagy and SQSTM1 on the RHOA(d) again

Authors :
Papa Diogop Ndiaye
Georges F. Carle
Baharia Mograbi
Daniel J. Klionsky
Paul Hofman
Patrick Brest
Laurence Cailleteau
Amine Belaid
Michael Cerezo
Source :
Autophagy. 10:201-208
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2013.

Abstract

Degradation of signaling proteins is one of the most powerful tumor-suppressive mechanisms by which a cell can control its own growth, its survival, and its motility. Emerging evidence suggests that autophagy limits several signaling pathways by degrading kinases, downstream components, and transcription factors; however, this often occurs under stressful conditions. Our recent studies revealed that constitutive autophagy temporally and spatially controls the RHOA pathway. Specifically, inhibition of autophagosome degradation induces the accumulation of the GTP-bound form of RHOA. The active RHOA is sequestered via SQSTM1/p62 within autolysosomes, and accordingly fails to localize to the spindle midbody or to the cell surface, as we demonstrate herein. As a result, all RHOA-downstream responses are deregulated, thus driving cytokinesis failure, aneuploidy and motility, three processes that directly have an impact upon cancer progression. We therefore propose that autophagy acts as a degradative brake for RHOA signaling and thereby controls cell proliferation, migration, and genome stability.

Details

ISSN :
15548635 and 15548627
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Autophagy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....64d2a7722adec82c99b5a3e1e0f1df8a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4161/auto.27198