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Nutrient withdrawal rescues growth factor-deprived cells from mTOR-dependent damage
Emiliano Panieri, Gabriele Toietta, Marina Mele, Valentina Labate, Sofia Chiatamone Ranieri, Salvatore Fusco, Valentina Tesori, Annalisa Antonini, Giuseppe Maulucci, Marco De Spirito, Tommaso Galeotti, Giovambattista Pani
Aging · 2010 · ▲ 33 citations
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Altered intercellular communication
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Abstract
Deregulated nutrient signaling plays pivotal roles in body ageing and in diabetic complications; biochemical cascades linking energy dysmetabolism to cell damage and loss are still incompletely clarified, and novel molecular paradigms and pharmacological targets critically needed. We provide evidence that in the retrovirus-packaging cell line HEK293-T Phoenix, massive cell death in serum-free medium is remarkably prevented or attenuated by either glucose or aminoacid withdrawal, and by the glycolysis inhibitor 2-deoxy-glucose. A similar protection was also elicited by interference with mitochondrial function, clearly suggesting involvement of energy metabolism in increased cell survival. Oxidative stress did not account for nutrient toxicity on serum-starved cells. Instead, nutrient restriction was associated with reduced activity of the mTOR(definition)/S6 Kinase cascade. Moreover, pharmacological and genetic manipulation of the mTOR pathway modulated in an opposite fashion signaling to S6K/S6 and cell viability in nutrient-repleted medium. Additionally, stimulation of the AMP-activated Protein Kinase concomitantly inhibited mTOR signaling and cell death, while neither event was affected by overexpression of the NAD+ dependent deacetylase Sirt-1, another cellular sensor of nutrient scarcity. Finally, blockade of the mTOR cascade reduced hyperglycemic damage also in a more pathophysiologically relevant model, i.e. in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) exposed to hyperglycemia. Taken together these findings point to a key role of the mTOR/S6K cascade in cell damage by excess nutrients and scarcity of growth-factors, a condition shared by diabetes and other ageing-related pathologies.
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- 10.18632/aging.100183
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- 2026-06-10 MST
Cite this
APA
Panieri, E., Toietta, G., Mele, M., Labate, V., Ranieri, S.C., Fusco, S., Tesori, V., Antonini, A., Maulucci, G., Spirito, M.D., Galeotti, T., & Pani, G. (2010). Nutrient withdrawal rescues growth factor-deprived cells from mTOR-dependent damage. <em>Aging</em>. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.100183
Vancouver
Panieri E, Toietta G, Mele M, Labate V, Ranieri SC, Fusco S, et al. Nutrient withdrawal rescues growth factor-deprived cells from mTOR-dependent damage. Aging. 2010. doi:10.18632/aging.100183.
BibTeX
@article{emiliano2010Nutrie,
title = {Nutrient withdrawal rescues growth factor-deprived cells from mTOR-dependent damage},
author = {Emiliano Panieri and Gabriele Toietta and Marina Mele and Valentina Labate and Sofia Chiatamone Ranieri and Salvatore Fusco and Valentina Tesori and Annalisa Antonini and Giuseppe Maulucci and Marco De Spirito and Tommaso Galeotti and Giovambattista Pani},
journal = {Aging},
year = {2010},
doi = {10.18632/aging.100183},
}
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