An autophagy-inducing stapled peptide induces mitochondria dysfunction and triggers autotic cell death in triple-negative breast cancer

Cell Death Discov. 2023 Aug 19;9(1):303. doi: 10.1038/s41420-023-01600-0.

Abstract

Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent bulk degradation process essential for cell viability but excessive autophagy leads to a unique form of cell death termed autosis. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly aggressive subtype of breast cancer with notable defect in its autophagy process. In previous studies, we developed stapled peptides that specifically targeted the essential autophagy protein Beclin 1 to induce autophagy and promote endolysosomal trafficking. Here we show that one lead peptide Tat-SP4 induced mild increase of autophagy in TNBC cells but showed potent anti-proliferative effect that could not be rescued by inhibitors of programmed cell death pathways. The cell death induced by Tat-SP4 showed typical features of autosis including sustained adherence to the substrate surface, rupture of plasma membrane and effective rescue by digoxin, a cardioglycoside that blocks the Na+/K+ ATPase. Tat-SP4 also induced prominent mitochondria dysfunction including loss of mitochondria membrane potential, elevated mitochondria reactive oxygen species and reduced oxidative phosphorylation. The anti-proliferative effect of Tat-SP4 was confirmed in a TNBC xenograft model. Our study uncovers three notable aspects of autosis. Firstly, autosis can be triggered by moderate increase in autophagy if such increase exceeds the endogenous capacity of the host cells. Secondly, mitochondria may play an essential role in autosis with dysregulated autophagy leading to mitochondria dysfunction to trigger autosis. Lastly, intrinsic autophagy deficiency and quiescent mitochondria bioenergetic profile likely render TNBC cells particularly susceptible to autosis. Our designed peptides like Tat-SP4 may serve as potential therapeutic candidates against TNBC by targeting this vulnerability.