Cell Death and Disease (Mar 2021)

A protective role for autophagy in vitiligo

  • Emanuela Bastonini,
  • Daniela Kovacs,
  • Salvatore Raffa,
  • Marina delle Macchie,
  • Alessia Pacifico,
  • Paolo Iacovelli,
  • Maria Rosaria Torrisi,
  • Mauro Picardo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-021-03592-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract A growing number of studies supports the existence of a dynamic interplay between energetic metabolism and autophagy, whose induction represents an adaptive response against several stress conditions. Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved and a highly orchestrated catabolic recycling process that guarantees cellular homeostasis. To date, the exact role of autophagy in vitiligo pathogenesis is still not clear. Here, we provide the first evidence that autophagy occurs in melanocytes and fibroblasts from non-lesional skin of vitiligo patients, as a result of metabolic surveillance response. More precisely, this study is the first to reveal that induction of autophagy exerts a protective role against the intrinsic metabolic stress and attempts to antagonize degenerative processes in normal appearing vitiligo skin, where melanocytes and fibroblasts are already prone to premature senescence.