2016 Nov;12(11):2213-2229. Epub 2016 Sep 16.
Hernández-Tiedra S1,2, Fabriàs G3, Dávila D1,2, Salanueva ÍJ1, Casas J3, Montes LR4, Antón Z4, García-Taboada E1, Salazar-Roa M1, Lorente M1,2, Nylandsted J5, Armstrong J6,7, López-Valero I1,2, McKee CS6, Serrano-Puebla A1,8, García-López R1, González-Martínez J1,2, Abad JL3, Hanada K9, Boya P8, Goñi F4, Guzmán M1,10, Lovat P6, Jäättelä M5, Alonso A4, Velasco G1,2.
Abstract
Autophagy is considered primarily a cell survival process, although it can also lead to cell death. However, the factors that dictate the shift between these 2 opposite outcomes remain largely unknown. In this work, we used Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC, the main active component of marijuana, a compound that triggers autophagy-mediated cancer cell death) and nutrient deprivation (an autophagic stimulus that triggers cytoprotective autophagy) to investigate the precise molecular mechanisms responsible for the activation of cytotoxic autophagy in cancer cells. By using a wide array of experimental approaches we show that THC (but not nutrient deprivation) increases the dihydroceramide:ceramide ratio in the endoplasmic reticulum of glioma cells, and this alteration is directed to autophagosomes and autolysosomes to promote lysosomal membrane permeabilization, cathepsin release and the subsequent activation of apoptotic cell death. These findings pave the way to clarify the regulatory mechanisms that determine the selective activation of autophagy-mediated cancer cell death.
KEYWORDS:
autophagy; cancer; cannabinoids; cell death; sphingolipids
- PMID: 27635674
- DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2016.1213927
- [PubMed – in process]
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