Environmental exposure to arsenic is linked to adverse health effects including cancer and diabetes. Pleiotropic cellular effects are observed with arsenic exposure. Previously, we demonstrated that arsenic dysregulated the autophagy pathway at low, environmentally relevant concentrations. Here, we show that arsenic blocks autophagy by preventing autophagosome-lysosome fusion. Specifically, arsenic disrupts formation of the STX17-SNAP29-VAMP8 SNARE complex, where SNAP29 mediates vesicle fusion through bridging STX17-containing autophagosomes to VAMP8-bearing lysosomes. Mechanistically, arsenic inhibits SNARE complex formation, at least in part, by enhancing O-GlcNAcylation of SNAP29. Transfection of O-GlcNAcylation defective, but not wild type, SNAP29 into CRISPR-mediated knockout cells abolishes arsenic-mediated autophagy inhibition. These findings reveal a mechanism by which low-levels of arsenic perturb proteostasis through inhibition of SNARE complex formation, providing a possible therapeutic target for disease intervention in the more than 200 million people exposed to unsafe levels of arsenic.
Increased O-GlcNAcylation of SNAP29 drives arsenic-induced autophagic dysfunction.
Reference
Dodson M, Liu P, Jiang T, Ambrose AJ, Luo G, de la Vega MR, Cholanians AB, Wong PK, Chapman E, Zhang DD. 2018 Mar. Increased O-GlcNAcylation of SNAP29 drives arsenic-induced autophagic dysfunction. Mol Cell Biol. doi:10.1128/MCB.00595-17.
Abstract