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1.
Noda T  Fujita N  Yoshimori T 《Autophagy》2008,4(4):540-541
Atg12 and Atg8/LC3 are two ubiquitin-like proteins involved in autophagosome formation. They show several similar characteristics just like brothers evolved from the same ancestor, however, their functional relationship has been obscure. We recently reported that a super protein complex, the Atg16L complex, which consists of multiple Atg12-Atg5 conjugates and the associating protein Atg16L, has an E3-like role in the LC3 lipidation reaction(1). The activated intermediate, LC3-Atg3 (E2) is recruited to the site where the lipidation takes place by virtue of the Atg16L complex. Thus, these two closely resembling systems are connected also in terms of their functions. This finding will provide further important clues as to the origin of the autophagosome membrane, and how the process is regulated by starvation and PtdIns3P signals.  相似文献   

2.
《Autophagy》2013,9(6):824-826
Atg16L is a factor that is essential for elongation of the isolation membrane (also called phagophore), a precursor of the autophagosome. Atg16L facilitates LC3/Atg8-conjugation to phosphatidylethanolamine by forming an oligomeric complex with Atg12-conjugated Atg5 and recruiting an LC3-Atg3 intermediate to elongating isolation membranes. Although Atg16L is responsible for the isolation membrane localization of the complex, the mechanism by which Atg16L is targeted to or recognizes isolation membranes remains largely unknown. We recently reported finding that Atg16L specifically and directly interacts with the Golgi-resident small GTPase Rab33B (and Rab33A) via the coiled-coil domain of Atg16L. Since expression of a GTPase-deficient mutant of Rab33B or the coiled-coil domain of Atg16L modulates macroautophagy (simply referred to as autophagy below), Atg16L (or the Atg12-5/16L complex) is likely to function as a specific effector molecule for Rab33 in autophagosome formation. Future study of the cross talk between Atg16L-mediated autophagosome formation and Rab33-mediated membrane trafficking should provide an important clue to unresolved issues in autophagosome formation, specifically, the membrane source of autophagosomes.

Addendum to: Itoh T, Fujita N, Kanno E, Yamamoto A, Yoshimori T, Fukuda M. Golgiresident small GTPase Rab33B interacts with Atg16L and modulates autophagosome formation. Mol Biol Cell 2008; 19:2916–25.  相似文献   

3.
Fukuda M  Itoh T 《Autophagy》2008,4(6):824-826
Atg16L is a factor that is essential for elongation of the isolation membrane (also called phagophore), a precursor of the autophagosome. Atg16L facilitates LC3/Atg8-conjugation to phosphatidylethanolamine by forming an oligomeric complex with Atg12-conjugated Atg5 and recruiting an LC3-Atg3 intermediate to elongating isolation membranes. Although Atg16L is responsible for the isolation membrane localization of the complex, the mechanism by which Atg16L is targeted to or recognizes isolation membranes remains largely unknown. We recently reported finding that Atg16L specifically and directly interacts with the Golgi-resident small GTPase Rab33B (and Rab33A) via the coiled-coil domain of Atg16L. Since expression of a GTPase-deficient mutant of Rab33B or the coiled-coil domain of Atg16L modulates macroautophagy (simply referred to as autophagy below), Atg16L (or the Atg12-5/16L complex) is likely to function as a specific effector molecule for Rab33 in autophagosome formation. Future study of the cross talk between Atg16L-mediated autophagosome formation and Rab33-mediated membrane trafficking should provide an important clue to unresolved issues in autophagosome formation, specifically, the membrane source of autophagosomes.  相似文献   

4.
Macroautophagy (autophagy) is a highly conserved cellular recycling process involved in degradation of eukaryotic cellular components. During autophagy, macromolecules and organelles are sequestered into the double-membrane autophagosome and degraded in the vacuole/lysosome. Autophagy-related 8 (Atg8), a core Atg protein essential for autophagosome formation, is a marker of several autophagic structures: the pre-autophagosomal structure (PAS), isolation membrane (IM), and autophagosome. Atg8 is conjugated to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) through a ubiquitin-like conjugation system to yield Atg8-PE; this reaction is called Atg8 lipidation. Although the mechanisms of Atg8 lipidation have been well studied in vitro, the cellular locale of Atg8 lipidation remains enigmatic. Atg3 is an E2-like enzyme that catalyzes the conjugation reaction between Atg8 and PE. Therefore, we hypothesized that the localization of Atg3 would provide insights about the site of the lipidation reaction. To explore this idea, we constructed functional GFP-tagged Atg3 (Atg3-GFP) by inserting the GFP portion immediately after the handle region of Atg3. During autophagy, Atg3-GFP transiently formed a single dot per cell on the vacuolar membrane. This Atg3-GFP dot colocalized with 2× mCherry-tagged Atg8, demonstrating that Atg3 is localized to autophagic structures. Furthermore, we found that Atg3-GFP is localized to the IM by fine-localization analysis. The localization of Atg3 suggests that Atg3 plays an important role in autophagosome formation at the IM.  相似文献   

5.
Atg12 is conjugated to Atg5 through enzymatic reactions similar to ubiquitination. The Atg12–Atg5 conjugate functions as an E3‐like enzyme to promote lipidation of Atg8, whereas lipidated Atg8 has essential roles in both autophagosome formation and selective cargo recognition during autophagy. However, the molecular role of Atg12 modification in these processes has remained elusive. Here, we report the crystal structure of the Atg12–Atg5 conjugate. In addition to the isopeptide linkage, Atg12 forms hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions with Atg5, thereby fixing its position on Atg5. Structural comparison with unmodified Atg5 and mutational analyses showed that Atg12 modification neither induces a conformational change in Atg5 nor creates a functionally important architecture. Rather, Atg12 functions as a binding module for Atg3, the E2 enzyme for Atg8, thus endowing Atg5 with the ability to interact with Atg3 to facilitate Atg8 lipidation.  相似文献   

6.
Geng J  Klionsky DJ 《EMBO reports》2008,9(9):859-864
As a lysosomal/vacuolar degradative pathway that is conserved in eukaryotic organisms, autophagy mediates the turnover of long-lived proteins and excess or aberrant organelles. The main characteristic of autophagy is the formation of a double-membrane vesicle, the autophagosome, which envelops part of the cytoplasm and delivers it to the lysosome/vacuole for breakdown and eventual recycling of the degradation products. Among the approximately 30 autophagy-related (Atg) genes identified so far, there are two ubiquitin-like proteins, Atg12 and Atg8. Analogous to ubiquitination, Atg12 is conjugated to Atg5 by Atg7--an E1-like protein--and Atg10--an E2-like protein. Similarly, Atg7 and Atg3 are the respective E1-like and E2-like proteins that mediate the conjugation of Atg8 to phosphatidylethanolamine. Both Atg12-Atg5 and Atg8 localize to the developing autophagosome. The Atg12-Atg5 conjugate facilitates the lipidation of Atg8 and directs its correct subcellular localization. Atg8-phosphatidylethanolamine is probably a scaffold protein that supports membrane expansion and the amount present correlates with the size of autophagosomes.  相似文献   

7.
Ubiquitin‐like proteins (UBLs) are activated, transferred and conjugated by E1‐E2‐E3 enzyme cascades. E2 enzymes for canonical UBLs such as ubiquitin, SUMO, and NEDD8 typically use common surfaces to bind to E1 and E3 enzymes. Thus, canonical E2s are required to disengage from E1 prior to E3‐mediated UBL ligation. However, E1, E2, and E3 enzymes in the autophagy pathway are structurally and functionally distinct from canonical enzymes, and it has not been possible to predict whether autophagy UBL cascades are organized according to the same principles. Here, we address this question for the pathway mediating lipidation of the human autophagy UBL, LC3. We utilized bioinformatic and experimental approaches to identify a distinctive region in the autophagy E2, Atg3, that binds to the autophagy E3, Atg12~Atg5‐Atg16. Short peptides corresponding to this Atg3 sequence inhibit LC3 lipidation in vitro. Notably, the E3‐binding site on Atg3 overlaps with the binding site for the E1, Atg7. Accordingly, the E3 competes with Atg7 for binding to Atg3, implying that Atg3 likely cycles back and forth between binding to Atg7 for loading with the UBL LC3 and binding to E3 to promote LC3 lipidation. The results show that common organizational principles underlie canonical and noncanonical UBL transfer cascades, but are established through distinct structural features.  相似文献   

8.
In the process of autophagy, a ubiquitin-like molecule, LC3/Atg8, is conjugated to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and associates with forming autophagosomes. In mammalian cells, the existence of multiple Atg8 homologues (referred to as LC3 paralogues) has hampered genetic analysis of the lipidation of LC3 paralogues. Here, we show that overexpression of an inactive mutant of Atg4B, a protease that processes pro-LC3 paralogues, inhibits autophagic degradation and lipidation of LC3 paralogues. Inhibition was caused by sequestration of free LC3 paralogues in stable complexes with the Atg4B mutant. In mutant overexpressing cells, Atg5- and ULK1-positive intermediate autophagic structures accumulated. The length of these membrane structures was comparable to that in control cells; however, a significant number were not closed. These results show that the lipidation of LC3 paralogues is involved in the completion of autophagosome formation in mammalian cells. This study also provides a powerful tool for a wide variety of studies of autophagy in the future.  相似文献   

9.
Macroautophagy is a mechanism of degradation of cytoplasmic components in all eukaryotic cells. In macroautophagy, cytoplasmic components are wrapped by double-membrane structures called autophagosomes, whose formation involves unique membrane dynamics, i.e., de novo formation of a double-membrane sac called the isolation membrane and its elongation. However, the precise regulatory mechanism of isolation membrane formation and elongation remains unknown. In this study, we showed that Golgi-resident small GTPase Rab33B (and Rab33A) specifically interacts with Atg16L, an essential factor in isolation membrane formation, in a guanosine triphosphate-dependent manner. Expression of a GTPase-deficient mutant Rab33B (Rab33B-Q92L) induced the lipidation of LC3, which is an essential process in autophagosome formation, even under nutrient-rich conditions, and attenuated macroautophagy, as judged by the degradation of p62/sequestosome 1. In addition, overexpression of the Rab33B binding domain of Atg16L suppressed autophagosome formation. Our findings suggest that Rab33 modulates autophagosome formation through interaction with Atg16L.  相似文献   

10.
Autophagy is an intracellular degradation process, through which cytosolic materials are delivered to the lysosome. Despite recent identification of many autophagy-related genes, how autophagosomes are generated remains unclear. Here, we examined the hierarchical relationships among mammalian Atg proteins. Under starvation conditions, ULK1, Atg14, WIPI-1, LC3 and Atg16L1 target to the same compartment, whereas DFCP1 localizes adjacently to these Atg proteins. In terms of puncta formation, the protein complex including ULK1 and FIP200 is the most upstream unit and is required for puncta formation of the Atg14-containing PI3-kinase complex. Puncta formation of both DFCP1 and WIPI-1 requires FIP200 and Atg14. The Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L1 complex and LC3 are downstream units among these factors. The punctate structures containing upstream Atg proteins such as ULK1 and Atg14 tightly associate with the ER, where the ER protein vacuole membrane protein 1 (VMP1) also transiently localizes. These structures are formed even when cells are treated with wortmannin to suppress autophagosome formation. These hierarchical analyses suggest that ULK1, Atg14 and VMP1 localize to the ER-associated autophagosome formation sites in a PI3-kinase activity-independent manner.Key words: autophagosome, PI3-kinase, isolation membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, ULK  相似文献   

11.
The members of the LC3/Atg8 family of proteins are covalently attached to phagophore and autophagosomal membranes. At the last step of the LC3 lipidation cascade, LC3 is transferred from the E2 enzyme ATG3 to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). This transfer is stimulated by the ATG12–ATG5-ATG16L1 E3 complex, but the mechanism is not fully understood. We recently found that ATG12 of the E3 binds to a short sequence in the flexible region (FR) of ATG3 with high affinity, and that this interaction is critical for E2–E3 complex formation. These findings, together with detailed structural analyses of this interaction, define the properties of ATG12 and provide new insights of how LC3 transfer begins with ATG3 recruitment by ATG12.  相似文献   

12.
《Autophagy》2013,9(3):522-523
The members of the LC3/Atg8 family of proteins are covalently attached to phagophore and autophagosomal membranes. At the last step of the LC3 lipidation cascade, LC3 is transferred from the E2 enzyme ATG3 to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). This transfer is stimulated by the ATG12–ATG5-ATG16L1 E3 complex, but the mechanism is not fully understood. We recently found that ATG12 of the E3 binds to a short sequence in the flexible region (FR) of ATG3 with high affinity, and that this interaction is critical for E2–E3 complex formation. These findings, together with detailed structural analyses of this interaction, define the properties of ATG12 and provide new insights of how LC3 transfer begins with ATG3 recruitment by ATG12.  相似文献   

13.
Autophagy is an intracellular degradation process to clear up aggregated proteins or aged and damaged organelles. The Beclin1-Vps34-Atg14L complex is essential for autophagosome formation. However, how the complex formation is regulated is unclear. Here, we show that Dapper1 (Dpr1) acts as a critical regulator of the Beclin1-Vps34-Atg14L complex to promote autophagy. Dpr1 ablation in the central nervous system results in motor coordination defect and accumulation of p62 and ubiquitinated proteins. Dpr1 increases autophagosome formation as indicated by elevated puncta formation of LC3, Atg14L and DFCP1 (Double FYVE-containing protein 1). Conversely, loss of Dpr1 impairs LC3 lipidation and causes p62/SQSTM1 accumulation. Dpr1 directly interacts with Beclin1 and Atg14L and enhances the Beclin1-Vps34 interaction and Vps34 activity. Together, our findings suggest that Dpr1 enhances the Atg14L-Beclin1-Vps34 complex formation to drive autophagy.  相似文献   

14.
Atg8 and its mammalian homolog LC3, ubiquitin-like proteins (Ubls) required for autophagosome formation, are remarkably unique in that their conjugation target is the lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Although PE was identified as the sole lipid conjugated with Atg8/LC3 in vivo, phosphatidylserine (PS) can be also a good substrate for its conjugation reaction in vitro. This posed a simple, intriguing question: What confers substrate specificity to lipidation of Atg8/LC3 in vivo? Our recent in vitro studies propose that intracellular milieus such as cytosolic pH and acidic phospholipids in membranes significantly contribute to selective production of the Atg8-PE conjugate.  相似文献   

15.
《Autophagy》2013,9(6):764-776
Autophagy is an intracellular degradation process, through which cytosolic materials are delivered to the lysosome. Despite recent identification of many autophagy-related genes, how autophagosomes are generated remains unclear. Here, we examined the hierarchical relationships among mammalian Atg proteins. Under starvation conditions, ULK1, Atg14, WIPI-1, LC3 and Atg16L1 target to the same compartment, whereas DFCP1 localizes adjacently to these Atg proteins. In terms of puncta formation, the protein complex including ULK1 and FIP200 is the most upstream unit and is required for puncta formation of the Atg14-containing PI3-kinase complex. Puncta formation of both DFCP1 and WIPI-1 requires FIP200 and Atg14. The Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L1 complex and LC3 are downstream units among these factors. The punctate structures containing upstream Atg proteins such as ULK1 and Atg14 tightly associate with the ER, where the ER protein Vacuole membrane protein 1 (VMP1) also transiently localizes. These structures are formed even when cells are treated with wortmannin to suppress autophagosome formation. These hierarchical analyses suggest that ULK1, Atg14 and VMP1 localize to the ER-associated autophagosome formation sites in a PI3-kinase activity-independent manner.  相似文献   

16.
《Autophagy》2013,9(7):911-913
Atg8 and its mammalian homolog LC3, ubiquitin-like proteins (Ubls) required for autophagosome formation, are remarkably unique in that their conjugation target is the lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Although PE was identified as the sole lipid conjugated with Atg8/LC3 in vivo, phosphatidylserine (PS) can be also a good substrate for its conjugation reaction in vitro. This posed a simple, intriguing question: What confers substrate specificity to lipidation of Atg8/LC3 in vivo? Our recent in vitro studies propose that intracellular milieus such as cytosolic pH and acidic phospholipids in membranes significantly contribute to selective production of the Atg8¬¬–PE conjugate.1

Addendum to: Oh-oka K, Nakatogawa H, Ohsumi Y. Physiological pH and acidic phospholipids contribute to substrate specificity in lipidation of Atg8. J Biol Chem 2008; 10.1074/jbc.M801836200.  相似文献   

17.
《Autophagy》2013,9(10):1639-1641
The role of membrane remodeling and phosphoinositide-binding proteins in autophagy remains elusive. PX domain proteins bind phosphoinositides and participate in membrane remodeling and trafficking events and we therefore hypothesized that one or several PX domain proteins are involved in autophagy. Indeed, the PX-BAR protein SNX18 was identified as a positive regulator of autophagosome formation using an image-based siRNA screen. We show that SNX18 interacts with ATG16L1 and LC3, and functions downstream of ATG14 and the class III PtdIns3K complex in autophagosome formation. SNX18 facilitates recruitment of ATG16L1 to perinuclear recycling endosomes, and its overexpression leads to tubulation of ATG16L1- and LC3-positive membranes. We propose that SNX18 promotes LC3 lipidation and tubulation of recycling endosomes to provide membrane for phagophore expansion.  相似文献   

18.
The membrane remodeling events required for autophagosome biogenesis are still poorly understood. Because PX domain proteins mediate membrane remodeling and trafficking, we conducted an imaging-based siRNA screen for autophagosome formation targeting human PX proteins. The PX-BAR protein SNX18 was identified as a positive regulator of autophagosome formation, and its Drosophila melanogaster homologue SH3PX1 was found to be required for efficient autophagosome formation in the larval fat body. We show that SNX18 is required for recruitment of Atg16L1-positive recycling endosomes to a perinuclear area and for delivery of Atg16L1- and LC3-positive membranes to autophagosome precursors. We identify a direct interaction of SNX18 with LC3 and show that the pro-autophagic activity of SNX18 depends on its membrane binding and tubulation capacity. We also show that the function of SNX18 in membrane tubulation and autophagy is negatively regulated by phosphorylation of S233. We conclude that SNX18 promotes autophagosome formation by virtue of its ability to remodel membranes and provide membrane to forming autophagosomes.  相似文献   

19.
The membrane origin of autophagosomes has long been a mystery and it may involve multiple sources. In this punctum, we discuss our recent finding that the plasma membrane contributes to the formation of pre-autophagic structures via clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Our study suggests that Atg16L1 interacts with clathrin heavy-chain/AP2 and is also localized on vesicles (positive for clathrin or cholera toxin B) close to the plasma membrane. Live-cell imaging studies revealed that the plasma membrane contributes to Atg16L1-positive structures and that this process and autophagosome formation are impaired by knockdowns of genes regulating clathrin-mediated endocytosis.Key words: autophagy, plasma membrane, endocytosis, phagophore, originWhere do autophagosomes get their membrane from? Although the field of autophagy has grown tremendously since its discovery a few decades ago, the origin(s) of the membranes that contribute to autophagosome biogenesis has been a mystery among autophagy researchers until recently. Mammalian autophagosomes are formed randomly throughout the cytoplasm via a process that involves elongation and fusion of phagophores to form double-membraned autophagosomes. This process involves two ubiquitin-like conjugation systems: conjugation of Atg12 to Atg5 that later forms a macromolecular complex with Atg16L1, and conjugation of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) with Atg8/LC3-I. The Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L1 complex is targeted to the preautophagic structures, which then acquire Atg8. Atg12-Atg5-Atg16L1 dissociates from completed autophagosomes, while LC3-PE (LC3-II) is associated both with pre-autophagic structures and completed autophagosomes.Some recent studies have explored the contribution of membranes from different organelles supporting the general idea that autophagosomes derive membranes from pre-existing organelles. It is quite possible that there may be multiple membrane sources involved. A few groups have revisited the hypothesis that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) may be one of the membrane donors. High-resolution 2D electron microscopy (EM) and 3D EM-tomography studies have revealed connections between the ER and the growing autophagosomes. Whether the ER contributes to general autophagy or a specific form of autophagy, reticulophagy, remains to be determined. In addition, it has not been shown if ER membrane is required for autophagosome formation. Recently another study has reported that autophagosomes receive lipids from the outer mitochondrial membrane, but only under starvation conditions, again fueling the multiple-membrane source hypothesis.We have now found evidence for plasma membrane contribution to pre-autophagic structures via endocytosis. Unlike the previous studies, which have focused on LC3- positive structures, we looked specifically at the Atg5-, Atg12- and Atg16-positive pre-autophagic structures, an idea that stemmed from our finding that clathrin heavy-chain immunoprecipitates with Atg16L1. We think that this interaction is partly mediated by the adaptor protein AP2, since knockdown of AP2 decreases the clathrin heavy-chain-Atg16L1 interaction. Immunogold EM also shows clathrin localization on Atg16L1-labeled vesicles close to the plasma membrane.These findings led us to test whether knockdown of proteins involved in clathrin-mediated endocytosis affected Atg16L1-positive pre-autophagic structures. Indeed, knockdown of key proteins in the clathrin-mediated endocytic pathway results in a decrease in the formation of Atg16L1-positive structures both under basal or autophagy-induced conditions (starvation or trehalose treatment). This correlates with a decrease in the number of LC3-labeled autophagosomes. When we directly analyzed vesicle fusion by livecell microscopy, we observed that vesicles endocytosed from the plasma membrane fuse to the Atg16L1-positive vesicles close to the plasma membrane. This was confirmed by immuno-EM when we found cholera toxin B-labeling (used to label plasma membrane that is subsequently internalized by endocytosis) on Atg16L1-vesicles. We noticed that overexpression of an Atg16L1 mutant that does not bind clathrin heavy-chain does not form Atg16L1-vesicular structures in the way we see with wild-type Atg16L1, suggesting that the binding of Atg16L1 to AP2/clathrin is required for the subsequent formation of the Atg16L1 vesicles.When we blocked endocytic vesicle scission (using both genetic and chemical inhibitors) we found that Atg16L1 strongly immunoprecipitates with clathrin-heavy chain probably due to the accumulation of clathrin-Atg16L1 structures at the plasma membrane that failed to pinch off. This was strongly supported by our fluorescence microscopy and immuno-EM studies that showed what we predicted—accumulation of Atg16L1 at the plasma membrane. This suggests that Atg16L1 in a complex with AP2/clathrin is targeted to the plasma membrane and subsequently internalized as Atg16L1-positive structures. Thus, our data strongly suggest that plasma membrane contributes to early autophagic precursors that subsequently mature to form phagophores (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Plasma membrane contributes to the formation of early autophagic precursors. Previous studies show that delivery of fully formed autophagosomes to lysosomes requires fusion of such autophagosomes with early or late endosomes to form amphisomes, which are Atg16L1-negative, LC3-positive and are also positive for endosomal markers. We show that blocking clathrin-mediated endocytosis inhibits formation of Atg16L1-positive structures that mature to form phagophores and later autophagosomes. These Atg16L1-vesicles are positive for other early autophagosomal markers like Atg5 and Atg12, but are negative for early endosomal markers like EEA1, suggesting that they are high up in the autophagosome biogenesis cascade. Inhibition of dynamin with Dynsasore or the use of a dominant negative K44A mutant blocks scission and results in Atg16L1 accumulation on the plasma membrane, suggesting that endosomal scission is critical for this process.Although previous studies suggest that completely formed autophagosomes need to fuse with early or late endosomes in order for subsequent autophagosomelysosome fusion to occur, they did not look at the formation of pre-autophagic structures. Our study shows that active endocytosis is required both for the formation of autophagosomes, when very early endocytic intermediates immediately pinching off the plasma membrane (not early endosomes) fuse with Atg16L1-positive structures to form phagophores, and also for maturation of autophagosomes when early or late endosomes fuse with Atg16L1-negative but LC3-positive autophagosomes to form amphisomes. Since blocking clathrin-mediated endocytosis does not completely abrogate autophagosome formation, we believe that other endocytic pathways may have a similar role. Depending on the cell type or the physiological conditions, the contributions from the different endocytic pathways may vary accordingly. It will be interesting to know if the endocytic pathway continuously delivers membrane for early steps in autophagy as the preautophagic structures grow and mature to form autophagosomes, deriving membrane from other sources.  相似文献   

20.
Autophagosome biogenesis requires two ubiquitin‐like conjugation systems. One couples ubiquitin‐like Atg8 to phosphatidylethanolamine, and the other couples ubiquitin‐like Atg12 to Atg5. Atg12~Atg5 then forms a heterodimer with Atg16. Membrane recruitment of the Atg12~Atg5/Atg16 complex defines the Atg8 lipidation site. Lipidation requires a PI3P‐containing precursor. How PI3P is sensed and used to coordinate the conjugation systems remained unclear. Here, we show that Atg21, a WD40 β‐propeller, binds via PI3P to the preautophagosomal structure (PAS). Atg21 directly interacts with the coiled‐coil domain of Atg16 and with Atg8. This latter interaction requires the conserved F5K6‐motif in the N‐terminal helical domain of Atg8, but not its AIM‐binding site. Accordingly, the Atg8 AIM‐binding site remains free to mediate interaction with its E2 enzyme Atg3. Atg21 thus defines PI3P‐dependently the lipidation site by linking and organising the E3 ligase complex and Atg8 at the PAS.  相似文献   

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