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      Repetitive stimulation of autophagy-lysosome machinery by intermittent fasting preconditions the myocardium to ischemia-reperfusion injury.

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          Abstract

          Autophagy, a lysosomal degradative pathway, is potently stimulated in the myocardium by fasting and is essential for maintaining cardiac function during prolonged starvation. We tested the hypothesis that intermittent fasting protects against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury via transcriptional stimulation of the autophagy-lysosome machinery. Adult C57BL/6 mice subjected to 24-h periods of fasting, every other day, for 6 wk were protected from in-vivo ischemia-reperfusion injury on a fed day, with marked reduction in infarct size in both sexes as compared with nonfasted controls. This protection was lost in mice heterozygous null for Lamp2 (coding for lysosomal-associated membrane protein 2), which demonstrate impaired autophagy in response to fasting with accumulation of autophagosomes and SQSTM1, an autophagy substrate, in the heart. In lamp2 null mice, intermittent fasting provoked progressive left ventricular dilation, systolic dysfunction and hypertrophy; worsening cardiomyocyte autophagosome accumulation and lack of protection to ischemia-reperfusion injury, suggesting that intact autophagy-lysosome machinery is essential for myocardial homeostasis during intermittent fasting and consequent ischemic cardioprotection. Fasting and refeeding cycles resulted in transcriptional induction followed by downregulation of autophagy-lysosome genes in the myocardium. This was coupled with fasting-induced nuclear translocation of TFEB (transcription factor EB), a master regulator of autophagy-lysosome machinery; followed by rapid decline in nuclear TFEB levels with refeeding. Endogenous TFEB was essential for attenuation of hypoxia-reoxygenation-induced cell death by repetitive starvation, in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, in-vitro. Taken together, these data suggest that TFEB-mediated transcriptional priming of the autophagy-lysosome machinery mediates the beneficial effects of fasting-induced autophagy in myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Autophagy
          Autophagy
          1554-8635
          1554-8627
          2015
          : 11
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] a Division of Cardiology and Center for Cardiovascular Research ; Department of Internal Medicine; Washington University School of Medicine ; St. Louis , MO USA.
          [2 ] b John Cochran VA Medical Center ; St. Louis , MO USA.
          [3 ] c Department of Genetics ; Washington University School of Medicine ; St. Louis , MO USA.
          [4 ] d Institut für Biochemie; Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel ; Kiel , Germany.
          Article
          10.1080/15548627.2015.1063768
          4590628
          26103523
          0226dbf3-338d-494b-8e78-fb5f5f50217f
          History

          autophagy,fasting,ischemia-reperfusion,lysosome,myocardial infarction

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