4.7 Article

Estrogen and estrogen receptors chauffeur the sex-biased autophagic action in liver

Journal

CELL DEATH AND DIFFERENTIATION
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages 3117-3130

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41418-020-0567-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan
  2. Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Kakenhi [23688022, 24370028, 16H04981, 23380110, 18K14520, 19H03049]
  3. Ehime University Post-Doctoral Research Grant, Japan
  4. Sumitomo Grant [180959]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19H03049, 23688022, 18K14520, 23380110, 16H04981] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Autophagy, or cellular self-digestion, is an essential cellular process imperative for energy homeostasis, development, differentiation, and survival. However, the intrinsic factors that bring about the sex-biased differences in liver autophagy are still unknown. In this work, we found that autophagic genes variably expresses in the steroidogenic tissues, mostly abundant in liver, and is influenced by the individual's sexuality. Starvation-induced autophagy in a time-dependent female-dominated manner, and upon starvation, a strong gender responsive circulating steroid-HK2 relation was observed, which highlighted the importance of estrogen in autophagy regulation. This was further confirmed by the enhanced or suppressed autophagy upon estrogen addition (male) or blockage (female), respectively. In addition, we found that estrogen proved to be the common denominator between stress management, glucose metabolism, and autophagic action in female fish. To understand further, we used estrogen receptor (ER)alpha- and ER-beta 2-knockout (KO) medaka and found ER-specific differences in sex-biased autophagy. Interestingly, starvation resulted in significantly elevated mTOR transcription (compared with control) in male ER alpha-KO fish while HK2 and ULK activation was greatly decreased in both KO fish in a female oriented fashion. Later, ChIP analysis confirmed that, NRF2, an upstream regulator of mTOR, only binds to ER alpha, while both ER alpha and ER beta 2 are effectively pulled down the HK2 and LC3. FIHC data show that, in both ER-KO fish, LC3 nuclear-cytoplasmic transport and its associated pathways involving SIRT1 and DOR were greatly affected. Cumulatively, our data suggest that, ER alpha-KO strongly affected the early autophagic initiation and altered the LC3 nuclear-cytoplasmic translocation, thereby influencing the sex-biased final autophagosome formation in medaka. Thus, existence of steroid responsive autophagy regulatory-switches and sex-biased steroid/steroid receptor availability influences the gender-skewed autophagy. Expectedly, this study may furnish newer appreciation for gender-specific medicine research and therapeutics.

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