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Lipophagy prevents activity‐dependent neurodegeneration due to dihydroceramide accumulation in vivo
Author(s) -
Jung WeiHung,
Liu ChungChih,
Yu YuLian,
Chang YuChin,
Lien WenYu,
Chao HsiChun,
Huang ShuYi,
Kuo ChingHua,
Ho HanChen,
Chan ChihChiang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
embo reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.584
H-Index - 184
eISSN - 1469-3178
pISSN - 1469-221X
DOI - 10.15252/embr.201643480
Subject(s) - neurodegeneration , microbiology and biotechnology , ceramide , biology , autophagy , sphingolipid , chemistry , apoptosis , biochemistry , medicine , disease , pathology
Abstract Dihydroceramide desaturases are evolutionarily conserved enzymes that convert dihydroceramide (dhCer) to ceramide (Cer). While elevated Cer levels cause neurodegenerative diseases, the neuronal activity of its direct precursor, dhCer, remains unclear. We show that knockout of the fly dhCer desaturase gene, infertile crescent ( ifc ), results in larval lethality with increased dhCer and decreased Cer levels. Light stimulation leads to ROS increase and apoptotic cell death in ifc ‐ KO photoreceptors, resulting in activity‐dependent neurodegeneration. Lipid‐containing Atg8/ LC 3‐positive puncta accumulate in ifc ‐ KO photoreceptors, suggesting lipophagy activation. Further enhancing lipophagy reduces lipid droplet accumulation and rescues ifc ‐ KO defects, indicating that lipophagy plays a protective role. Reducing dhCer synthesis prevents photoreceptor degeneration and rescues ifc ‐ KO lethality, while supplementing downstream sphingolipids does not. These results pinpoint that dhCer accumulation is responsible for ifc ‐ KO defects. Human dhCer desaturase rescues ifc ‐ KO larval lethality, and rapamycin reverses defects caused by dhCer accumulation in human neuroblastoma cells, suggesting evolutionarily conserved functions. This study demonstrates a novel requirement for dhCer desaturase in neuronal maintenance in vivo and shows that lipophagy activation prevents activity‐dependent degeneration caused by dhCer accumulation.

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