Enhancing autophagy by redox regulation extends lifespan in Drosophila

Claudia Lennicke,Ivana Bjedov,Sebastian Grönke,Katja E. Menger,Andrew M. James, Jorge Iván Castillo-Quan, Lucie A. G. van Leeuwen,Andrea Foley, Marcela Buricova, Jennifer Adcott, Alex Montoya, Holger B. Kramer, Pavel V. Shliaha, Angela Logan,Filipe Cabreiro,Michael P. Murphy,Linda Partridge,Helena M. Cochemé

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
Dysregulation of redox homeostasis has been implicated in the ageing process and the pathology of age-related diseases. To study redox signalling by H2O2 in vivo , we established a redox-shifted model by manipulating levels of the H2O2-degrading enzyme catalase in Drosophila . Here we report that ubiquitous over-expression of catalase robustly extends lifespan in flies. As anticipated, these flies were strongly resistant to a range of oxidative stress challenges, but interestingly were sensitive to starvation, which could not be explained by differences in levels of energy reserves. This led us to explore the contribution of autophagy, which is an important mechanism for organismal survival in response to starvation. We show that autophagy is essential for the increased lifespan upon catalase up-regulation, as the survival benefits were completely abolished upon global autophagy knock-down. Furthermore, using a specific redox-inactive knock-in mutant, we highlight the in vivo role of a key regulatory cysteine residue in Atg4a, which is required for the lifespan extension in our catalase model. Altogether, these findings confirm the redox regulation of autophagy in vivo as an important modulator of longevity. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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