Heat stress-induced autophagy promotes lactate secretion in cultured immature boar Sertoli cells by inhibiting apoptosis and driving SLC2A3, LDHA, and SLC16A1 expression
Date
Authors
Bao, Zi-Qiang
Liao, Ting-Ting
Yang, Wei-Rong
Wang, Yi
Luo, Hong-Yan
Wang, Xian-Zhong
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Abstract
This study aimed to determine whether heat stress (HS) could induce autophagy in immature boar Sertoli cells (SCs) and test whether HS-induced autophagy could regulate lactate secretion by SCs. Cultured immature boar SCs were incubated at 43 degrees C for 30 minutes. The ratio of LOB-II to LOB-I and the mRNA transcript levels of LOB showed time-dependent changes 0 to 48 hours after HS treatment, which peaked at 24 hours and increased by 30.25% or 260%, respectively, compared with control SCs. The density of autolysosomes, which were labeled with a red dye, was higher at 24 hours than at any other time point. However, the apoptosis rate, cleavage of caspase-3, and mRNA transcript levels of CASP3 (caspase-3) at 24 hours after HS were lower than at 12 hours. Furthermore, lactate secretion, and mRNA transcript levels of SLC2A3 (GLUTS), LDHA (LDHA), and SLC16A1 (MCT1) also showed time-dependent changes with a peak at 24 hours. In addition, LY294002 (20 mu M) significantly inhibited changes in ratio of LOB-II to LOB-I, LOB mRNA transcript levels, and autolysosome formation. It also resulted in significantly less lactate secretion and increased apoptosis but showed no effect on B-cell lymphoma-2 expression in heat-treated immature SCs. These findings indicated that HS-induced autophagy regulates lactate secretion by inhibiting apoptosis and increasing mRNA transcript and protein levels of SLC2A3, LDHA, and SLC16A1, which suggests that HS-induced autophagy may enhance lactate secretion by SCs
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Theriogenology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description