Interleukin-10 inhibits chronic angiotensin II-induced pathological autophagy

R Kishore, P Krishnamurthy, VNS Garikipati… - Journal of molecular and …, 2015 - Elsevier
Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology, 2015Elsevier
Background Although autophagy is an essential cellular salvage process to maintain
cellular homeostasis, pathological autophagy can lead to cardiac abnormalities and
ultimately heart failure. Therefore, a tight regulation of autophagic process would be
important to treat chronic heart failure. Previously, we have shown that IL-10 strongly
inhibited pressure overload-induced hypertrophy and heart failure, but role of IL-10 in
regulation of pathological autophagy is unknown. Here we tested the hypothesis that IL-10 …
Background
Although autophagy is an essential cellular salvage process to maintain cellular homeostasis, pathological autophagy can lead to cardiac abnormalities and ultimately heart failure. Therefore, a tight regulation of autophagic process would be important to treat chronic heart failure. Previously, we have shown that IL-10 strongly inhibited pressure overload-induced hypertrophy and heart failure, but role of IL-10 in regulation of pathological autophagy is unknown. Here we tested the hypothesis that IL-10 inhibits angiotensin II-induced pathological autophagy and this process, in part, leads to improve cardiac function.
Methods and results
Chronic Ang II strongly induced mortality, cardiac dysfunction in IL-10 Knockout mice. IL-10 deletion exaggerated pathological autophagy in response to Ang II treatment. In isolated cardiac myocytes, IL-10 attenuated Ang II-induced pathological autophagy and activated Akt/mTORC1 signaling. Pharmacological or molecular inhibition of Akt and mTORC1 signaling attenuated IL-10 effects on Ang II-induced pathological autophagy. Furthermore, lysosomal inhibition in autophagic flux experiments further confirmed that IL-10 inhibits pathological autophagy via mTORC1 signaling.
Conclusion
Our data demonstrate a novel role of IL-10 in regulation of pathological autophagy; thus can act as a potential therapeutic molecule for treatment of chronic heart disease.
Elsevier