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PKCα replaces AMPK to regulate mitophagy: Another PEDF role on ischaemic cardioprotection.

Both decreased autophagy positive regulator AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK) level and promoted mitophagy are observed in oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) cardiomyocytes treated with pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF). This contradictory phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms have not been thoroughly elucidated. Our previous study reveals that PEDF increases the protein kinase Cα (PKCα) and phospho-PKCα (p-PKCα) contents to promote mitophagy. Thus, we investigated the association between PKCα and mitophagy. Here we identify an interaction between PKCα and Unc-51-like kinase 1 (ULK1), essential component of mitophagy. Further analyses show this is a direct interaction within a domain of ULK1 that termed the serine/threonine-rich domain (S/T domain). Notably, a deletion mutant ULK1 that lacks the binding domain is defective in mediating PEDF-induced mitophagy. Furthermore, we demonstrate that ULK1 is phosphorylated at Ser317/555/777 and Raptor is also phosphorylated by phospho-PKCα. Phospho-ULK1 (p-ULK1) at these sites are all essential for PEDF-induced mitophagy and reduce the release of mitochondrial ROS and DNA. This study therefore identifies a previously uncharacterized interaction between the ULK1 and PKCα that can replace the AMPK-dependent mitophagy processes.

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