Abstract

Autophagy is a tightly regulated mechanism that allows cells to renew themselves through the lysosomal degradation of proteins, which are misfolded or produced in excess, and of damaged organelles. In the context of immunity, recent research has specially attempted to clarify its roles in infection, inflammation and autoimmunity. Autophagy has emerged as a spotlight in several molecular pathways and trafficking events that participate to innate and adaptive immunity. Deregulation of autophagy has been associated to several autoimmune diseases, in particular to systemic lupus erythematosus. Nowadays, however, experimental data on the implication of autophagy in animal models of autoimmunity or patients remain limited. In our investigations, we use Murphy Roths Large (MRL)/lymphoproliferation (lpr) lupus-prone mice as a mouse model for lupus and secondary Sjögren’s syndrome, and, herein, we describe methods applied routinely to analyze different autophagic pathways in different lymphoid organs and tissues (spleen, lymph nodes, salivary glands). We also depict some techniques used to analyze autophagy in lupus patient’s blood samples. These methods can be adapted to the analysis of autophagy in other mouse models of autoinflammatory diseases. The understanding of autophagy implication in autoimmune diseases could prove to be very useful for developing novel immunomodulatory strategies. Our attention should be focused on the fact that autophagy processes are interconnected and that distinct pathways can be independently hyper-activated or downregulated in distinct organs and tissues of the same individual.

Highlights

  • Autophagy is a tightly regulated mechanism that allows cells to renew themselves through the lysosomal degradation of proteins, which are misfolded or produced in excess, and of damaged organelles

  • In addition to the above results related to MaA, we identified an overexpression, in Murphy Roths Large (MRL)/lpr mice, of chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA)-specific lysosomal receptor lysosome-associated membrane protein type 2A (LAMP-2A), suggesting a higher CMA activity in splenic B cells in these mice [30]

  • This review aims at providing some technical information for studying autophagy

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Summary

Introduction

Autophagy is a tightly regulated mechanism that allows cells to renew themselves through the lysosomal degradation of proteins, which are misfolded or produced in excess, and of damaged organelles. We depict some techniques used to analyze autophagy in lupus patient’s blood samples. These methods can be adapted to the analysis of autophagy in other mouse models of autoinflammatory diseases. Autophagy is a cellular process, which removes unwanted cytoplasmic content, such as long-lived proteins, damaged organelles or invading microorganisms, via lysosomal degradation. Key features of this cytoprotecting process lead to cellular generation of energy and recycling of metabolic precursors. Chaperone protein, which to targets the substrates to protein chaperone protein, which targets the substrates the surface of lysosomes surface the of lysosomes facilitates binding of substrates to lysosome-associated membrane andthe facilitates binding ofand substrates tothe lysosome-associated membrane protein type 2A (LAMP-2A)

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