Increased autophagy accelerates colchicine-induced muscle toxicity

Autophagy. 2013 Dec;9(12):2115-25. doi: 10.4161/auto.26150.

Abstract

Colchicine treatment is associated with an autophagic vacuolar myopathy in human patients. The presumed mechanism of colchicine-induced myotoxicity is the destabilization of the microtubule system that leads to impaired autophagosome-lysosome fusion and the accumulation of autophagic vacuoles. Using the MTOR inhibitor rapamycin we augmented colchicine’s myotoxic effect by increasing the autophagic flux; this resulted in an acute myopathy with muscle necrosis. In contrast to myonecrosis induced by cardiotoxin, myonecrosis induced by a combination of rapamycin and colchicine was associated with accumulation of autophagic substrates such as LC3-II and SQSTM1; as a result, autophagic vacuoles accumulated in the center of myofibers, where LC3-positive autophagosomes failed to colocalize with the lysosomal protein marker LAMP2. A similar pattern of central LC3 accumulation and myonecrosis is seen in human patients with colchicine myopathy, many of whom have been treated with statins (HMGCR/HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors) in addition to colchicine. In mice, cotreatment with colchicine and simvastatin also led to muscle necrosis and LC3 accumulation, suggesting that, like rapamycin, simvastatin activates autophagy. Consistent with this, treatment of mice with four different statin medications enhanced autophagic flux in skeletal muscle in vivo. Polypharmacy is a known risk factor for toxic myopathies; our data suggest that some medication combinations may simultaneously activate upstream autophagy signaling pathways while inhibiting the degradation of these newly synthesized autophagosomes, resulting in myotoxicity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Autophagy / drug effects
  • Autophagy / physiology*
  • Colchicine / pharmacology*
  • Disease Progression
  • Humans
  • Lysosomal Storage Diseases / chemically induced*
  • Lysosomal Storage Diseases / pathology
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Muscle, Skeletal / drug effects
  • Muscle, Skeletal / pathology
  • Muscle, Skeletal / physiopathology
  • Muscular Diseases / chemically induced*
  • Muscular Diseases / pathology
  • Phagosomes / drug effects
  • Phagosomes / pathology
  • Simvastatin / pharmacology
  • Up-Regulation / drug effects
  • Vacuoles / drug effects
  • Vacuoles / pathology

Substances

  • Simvastatin
  • Colchicine

Supplementary concepts

  • Vacuolar myopathy