To obtain mechanistic insights into the cross talk between lipolysis
and autophagy, two key metabolic responses to starvation, we
screened the autophagy-inducing potential of a panel of fatty
acids in human cancer cells. Both saturated and unsaturated fatty
acids such as palmitate and oleate, respectively, triggered
autophagy, but the underlying molecular mechanisms differed.
Oleate, but not palmitate, stimulated an autophagic response that
required an intact Golgi apparatus. Conversely, autophagy
triggered by palmitate, but not oleate, required AMPK, PKR and
JNK1 and involved the activation of the BECN1/PIK3C3 lipid kinase
complex. Accordingly, the downregulation of BECN1 and PIK3C3
abolished palmitate-induced, but not oleate-induced, autophagy
in human cancer cells. Moreover, Becn1+/ mice as well as yeast
cells and nematodes lacking the ortholog of human BECN1
mounted an autophagic response to oleate, but not palmitate. Thus, unsaturated fatty acids induce a non-canonical, phylogenetically
conserved, autophagic response that in mammalian cells
relies on the Golgi apparatus.