Selective modulation of autophagy, innate immunity, and adaptive immunity by small molecules

SY Shaw, K Tran, AB Castoreno… - ACS chemical …, 2013 - ACS Publications
SY Shaw, K Tran, AB Castoreno, JM Peloquin, KG Lassen, B Khor, LN Aldrich, PH Tan…
ACS chemical biology, 2013ACS Publications
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process that directs cytoplasmic
proteins, organelles and microbes to lysosomes for degradation. Autophagy acts at the
intersection of pathways involved in cellular stress, host defense, and modulation of
inflammatory and immune responses; however, the details of how the autophagy network
intersects with these processes remain largely undefined. Given the role of autophagy in
several human diseases, it is important to determine the extent to which modulators of …
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process that directs cytoplasmic proteins, organelles and microbes to lysosomes for degradation. Autophagy acts at the intersection of pathways involved in cellular stress, host defense, and modulation of inflammatory and immune responses; however, the details of how the autophagy network intersects with these processes remain largely undefined. Given the role of autophagy in several human diseases, it is important to determine the extent to which modulators of autophagy also modify inflammatory or immune pathways and whether it is possible to modulate a subset of these pathways selectively. Here, we identify small-molecule inducers of basal autophagy (including several FDA-approved drugs) and characterize their effects on IL-1β production, autophagic engulfment and killing of intracellular bacteria, and development of Treg, TH17, and TH1 subsets from naı̈ve T cells. Autophagy inducers with distinct, selective activity profiles were identified that reveal the functional architecture of connections between autophagy, and innate and adaptive immunity. In macrophages from mice bearing a conditional deletion of the essential autophagy gene Atg16L1, the small molecules inhibit IL-1β production to varying degrees suggesting that individual compounds may possess both autophagy-dependent and autophagy-independent activity on immune pathways. The small molecule autophagy inducers constitute useful probes to test the contributions of autophagy-related pathways in diseases marked by impaired autophagy or elevated IL-1β and to test novel therapeutic hypotheses.
ACS Publications