Methods for detection of cardiac glycogen-autophagy

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 Aug 11:2024.08.11.607511. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.11.607511.

Abstract

Glycogen-autophagy ('glycophagy') is a selective autophagy process involved in delivering glycogen to the lysosome for bulk degradation. Glycophagy protein intermediaries include STBD1 as a glycogen tagging receptor, delivering the glycogen cargo into the forming phagosome by partnering with the Atg8 homolog, GABARAPL1. Glycophagy is emerging as a key process of energy metabolism and development of reliable tools for assessment of glycophagy activity is an important priority. Here we show that antibodies raised against the N-terminus of the GABARAPL1 protein (but not the full-length protein) detected a specific endogenous GABARAPL1 immunoblot band at 18kDa. A stable GFP-GABARAPL1 cardiac cell line was used to quantify GABARAPL1 lysosomal flux via measurement of GFP puncta in response to lysosomal inhibition with bafilomycin. Endogenous glycophagy flux was quantified in primary rat ventricular myocytes by the extent of glycogen accumulation with bafilomycin combined with chloroquine treatment (no effect observed with bafilomycin or chloroquine alone). In wild-type isolated mouse hearts, bafilomycin alone and bafilomycin combined with chloroquine (but not chloroquine alone) elicited a significant increase in glycogen content signifying basal glycophagy flux. Collectively, these methodologies provide a comprehensive toolbox for tracking cardiac glycophagy activity to advance research into the role of glycophagy in health and disease.

Publication types

  • Preprint