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1.
Autophagy - the degradation of organelles and cytoplasmic material - occurs through dynamic rearrangements of cellular membrane structures. Following the induction of autophagy, newly formed autophagosomes transfer cytosolic materials to the lysosome or vacuole for degradation. The autophagosome is an organelle destined for degradation, suggesting that the membrane structure is formed de novo many times. The autophagosome is formed through the nucleation, assembly and elongation of membrane structures. The concerted action of several Apg/Aut/Cvt proteins around a characteristic subcellular structure (the preautophagosomal structure) is the key to understanding this novel type of membrane-formation process.  相似文献   

2.
Autophagy is a major catabolic pathway in eukaryotic cells whereby the lack of amino acids induces the formation of autophagosomes, double-bilayer membrane vesicles that mediate delivery of cytosolic proteins and organelles for lysosomal degradation. The biogenesis and turnover of autophagosomes in mammalian cells as well as the molecular mechanisms underlying induction of autophagy and trafficking of these vesicles are poorly understood. Here we utilized different autophagic markers to determine the involvement of microtubules in the autophagic process. We show that autophagosomes associate with microtubules and concentrate near the microtubule-organizing center. Moreover, we demonstrate that autophagosomes, but not phagophores, move along these tracks en route for degradation. Disruption of microtubules leads to a significant reduction in the number of mature autophagosomes but does not affect their life span or their fusion with lysosomes. We propose that microtubules serve to deliver only mature autophagosomes for degradation, thus providing a spatial barrier between phagophores and lysosomes.  相似文献   

3.
Autophagy is an intracellular bulk degradation system in which double‐membrane vesicles, called autophagosomes, engulf cytoplasmic components and later fuse with lysosomes to degrade the autophagosome content. Although autophagy was initially thought a non‐selective process, recent studies have clarified that it can selectively target intracellular bacteria and function as an intracellular innate immune system that suppresses bacterial survival. A key mechanism for the recognition of cytosol‐invading bacteria is ubiquitination, and the recognition of the ubiquitinated target by the autophagy machinery can be accomplished multiple ways. In this review, we discuss recent findings regarding the induction of autophagosome formation in response to intracellular bacterial invasion.  相似文献   

4.
Autophagy (which includes macro-, micro-, and chaperone-mediated autophagy) is an important biological mechanism for degradation of damaged/obsolete macromolecules and organelles. Ageing non-dividing cells, however, progressively accumulate oxidised proteins, defective organelles and intralysosomal lipofuscin inclusions, suggesting inherent insufficiency of autophagy. To learn more about the role of macroautophagy in the turnover of organelles and lipofuscin formation, we inhibited autophagic sequestration with 3-methyladenine (3 MA) in growth-arrested human fibroblasts, a classical model of cellular ageing. Such treatment resulted in a dramatic accumulation of altered lysosomes, displaying lipofuscin-like autofluorescence, as well as in a moderate increase of mitochondria with lowered membrane potential. The size of the late endosomal compartment appeared not to be significantly altered following 3 MA exposure. The accumulation of lipofuscin-like material was enhanced when 3 MA administration was combined with hyperoxia. The findings suggest that macroautophagy is essential for normal turnover of lysosomes. This notion is supported by reports in the literature of lysosomal membrane proteins inside lysosomes and/or late endosomes, as well as lysosomes with active hydrolases within autophagosomes following vinblastine-induced block of fusion between lysosomes and autophagosomes. The data also suggest that specific components of lysosomes, such as membranes and proteins, may be direct sources of lipofuscin.  相似文献   

5.
Autophagy: a regulated bulk degradation process inside cells   总被引:28,自引:0,他引:28  
Autophagy is a major intracellular degradation/recycling system ubiquitous in eukaryotic cells. It contributes to the turnover of cellular components by delivering portions of the cytoplasm and organelles to lysosomes, where they are digested. Autophagy is mediated by membrane trafficking of unique double-membrane structures, the so-called autophagosomes, which are formed transiently. Moreover, autophagy is dramatically induced under starvation conditions to maintain an amino acid pool so that essential proteins may be synthesized. Recent studies have revealed insights into the molecular basis of membrane dynamics and the regulation of autophagy, which had remained cryptic for a long time.  相似文献   

6.
Autophagy is a catabolic process conserved among all eukaryotes essential for the cellular and organismal homeostasis. One of the principal roles of this pathway is to maintain an accurate balance between synthesis, degradation and subsequent recycling of cellular components. Under certain conditions, however, cells are also able to modulate autophagy and specifically remove a number of structures that are potentially harmful. Aberrant protein aggregates, damaged organelles or pathogens can be selectively incorporated into large double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes to be delivered into lysosomes for destruction. This ability to eliminate specific structures is exploited by the cells in several physiological processes as well as in multiple pathological situations, making autophagy a precious multitask cellular degradative pathway. In this review, we will first examine what is known about the basic mechanisms of autophagy and then discuss in a second part the nature of the cargoes that are selectively sequestered into autophagosomes, what provides the specificity and the possible implications of selective types of autophagy in human pathologies.  相似文献   

7.
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process through which different components of the cells are sequestered into double-membrane cytosolic vesicles called autophagosomes, and fated to degradation through fusion with lysosomes. Autophagy plays a major function in many physiological processes including response to different stress factors, energy homeostasis, elimination of cellular organelles and tissue remodeling during development. Consequently, autophagy is strictly controlled and post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and ubiquitination have long been associated with autophagy regulation. In contrast, the importance of acetylation in autophagy control has only emerged in the last few years. In this review, we summarize how previously identified histone acetylases and deacetylases modify key autophagic effector proteins, and discuss how this has an impact on physiological and pathological cellular processes.  相似文献   

8.
Amal O. Amer 《Autophagy》2013,9(5):633-634
Autophagy has emerged as a significant innate immune response to pathogens. Typically, autophagosomes deliver their contents to lysosomes for degradation. Some pathogens such as Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium succumb to autophagy and are transported to lysosomes for degradation. Yet, many professional pathogens, including Legionella pneumophila and Burkholderia cenocepacia, subvert this pathway exploiting autophagy to their advantage.  相似文献   

9.
Autophagy, a cellular 'self-eating' process in eukaryotic cells, exists in both a basal and in an activated state that is induced in response to starvation. Basal and induced autophagy are associated with the packaging of cellular components, including damaged and/or redundant organelles, into double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes, followed by autophagosome fusion with lysosomes, in which their contents are degraded and recycled. Recent results highlight a novel role for autophagy that does not involve lysosomal degradation of autophagosomal contents, but instead involves their redirection towards the extracellular delivery of an unconventionally secreted protein. Here, we discuss these findings, evaluate the strength of evidence, consider their implications for the field of protein trafficking, and suggest the next steps required to probe this interesting pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Different mechanisms for delivery of intracellular components (proteins and organelles) to lysosomes and late endosomes for degradation co-exist in almost all cells and set the basis for distinct autophagic pathways. Cargo can be sequestered inside double-membrane vesicles (or autophagosomes) and reach the lysosomal compartment upon fusion of these vesicles to lysosomes through macroautophagy. In a different type of autophagy, known as chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), single individual soluble proteins can be targeted one by one to the lysosomal membrane and translocated into the lumen for degradation. Direct sequestration of proteins and organelles by invaginations at the lysosomal membrane that pinch off into the lumen has also been proposed. This process, known as microautophagy, remains poorly understood in mammalian cells. In our recent work, we demonstrate the occurrence of both "in bulk" and "selective" internalization of cytosolic components in late endosomes and identify some of the molecular players of this process that we have named endosomalmicroautophagy (e-MI) due to its resemblance to microautophagy.  相似文献   

11.
《Autophagy》2013,9(11):1397-1399
A close relationship exists between autophagy and endocytosis with both sharing lysosomes as their common end-point. Autophagy even requires a functional endocytic pathway. The point at which the two pathways merge, i.e., fusion of autophagosomes and endosomes with lysosomes is poorly understood. Early work in yeast and more recent studies in mammalian cells suggested that conventional membrane trafficking pathways control the fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes; Rab GTPases are required to recruit tethering proteins which in turn coordinate the SNARE family of proteins that directly drive membrane fusion. Some components required for endosomes to fuse with lysosomes are also shared by autophagosomes; both are thought to require the GTPase Rab7 and the homotypic fusion and vacuole protein sorting (HOPS) complex. Essentially, the autophagosome becomes endosome-like, allowing it to recruit the common fusion machinery to deliver its contents to the lysosome. This raises an interesting question of how the cell determines when the autophagosome is ready to fuse with the endocytic system and bestows upon it the properties required to recruit the fusion machinery. Our recent work has highlighted this conundrum and shown that autophagosome fusion with lysosomes has specific distinctions from the parallel endosomal-lysosomal pathway.  相似文献   

12.
Ganley IG  Wong PM  Jiang X 《Autophagy》2011,7(11):1397-1399
A close relationship exists between autophagy and endocytosis with both sharing lysosomes as their common end-point. Autophagy even requires a functional endocytic pathway. The point at which the two pathways merge, i.e., fusion of autophagosomes and endosomes with lysosomes is poorly understood. Early work in yeast and more recent studies in mammalian cells suggested that conventional membrane trafficking pathways control the fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes; Rab GTPases are required to recruit tethering proteins which in turn coordinate the SNARE family of proteins that directly drive membrane fusion. Some components required for endosomes to fuse with lysosomes are also shared by autophagosomes; both are thought to require the GTPase Rab7 and the homotypic fusion and vacuole protein sorting (HOPS) complex. Essentially, the autophagosome becomes endosome-like, allowing it to recruit the common fusion machinery to deliver its contents to the lysosome. This raises an interesting question of how the cell determines when the autophagosome is ready to fuse with the endocytic system and bestows upon it the properties required to recruit the fusion machinery. Our recent work has highlighted this conundrum and shown that autophagosome fusion with lysosomes has specific distinctions from the parallel endosomal-lysosomal pathway.  相似文献   

13.
Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is an evolutionarily conserved intracellular catabolic transport route that generally allows the lysosomal degradation of cytoplasmic components, including bulk cytosol, protein aggregates, damaged or superfluous organelles and invading microbes. Target structures are sequestered by double‐membrane vesicles called autophagosomes, which are formed through the concerted action of the autophagy (ATG)‐related proteins. Until recently it was assumed that ATG proteins were exclusively involved in autophagy. A growing number of studies, however, have attributed functions to some of them that are distinct from their classical role in autophagosome biogenesis. Autophagy‐independent roles of the ATG proteins include the maintenance of cellular homeostasis and resistance to pathogens. For example, they assist and enhance the turnover of dead cells and microbes upon their phagocytic engulfment, and inhibit murine norovirus replication. Moreover, bone resorption by osteoclasts, innate immune regulation triggered by cytoplasmic DNA and the ER‐associated degradation regulation all have in common the requirement of a subset of ATG proteins. Microorganisms such as coronaviruses, Chlamydia trachomatis or Brucella abortus have even evolved ways to manipulate autophagy‐independent functions of ATG proteins in order to ensure the completion of their intracellular life cycle. Taken together these novel mechanisms add to the repertoire of functions and extend the number of cellular processes involving the ATG proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Autophagy is a cellular response triggered by the lack of nutrients, especially the absence of amino acids. Autophagy is defined by the formation of double membrane structures, called autophagosomes, that sequester cytoplasm, long-lived proteins and protein aggregates, defective organelles, and even viruses or bacteria. Autophagosomes eventually fuse with lysosomes leading to bulk degradation of their content, with the produced nutrients being recycled back to the cytoplasm. Therefore, autophagy is crucial for cell homeostasis, and dysregulation of autophagy can lead to disease, most notably neurodegeneration, ageing and cancer.Autophagosome formation is a very elaborate process, for which cells have allocated a specific group of proteins, called the core autophagy machinery. The core autophagy machinery is functionally complemented by additional proteins involved in diverse cellular processes, e.g. in membrane trafficking, in mitochondrial and lysosomal biology. Coordination of these proteins for the formation and degradation of autophagosomes constitutes the highly dynamic and sophisticated response of autophagy. Live cell imaging allows one to follow the molecular contribution of each autophagy-related protein down to the level of a single autophagosome formation event and in real time, therefore this technique offers a high temporal and spatial resolution.Here we use a cell line stably expressing GFP-DFCP1, to establish a spatial and temporal context for our analysis. DFCP1 marks omegasomes, which are precursor structures leading to autophagosomes formation. A protein of interest (POI) can be marked with either a red or cyan fluorescent tag. Different organelles, like the ER, mitochondria and lysosomes, are all involved in different steps of autophagosome formation, and can be marked using a specific tracker dye. Time-lapse microscopy of autophagy in this experimental set up, allows information to be extracted about the fourth dimension, i.e. time. Hence we can follow the contribution of the POI to autophagy in space and time.  相似文献   

15.
Autophagy is a multistep membrane traffic pathway. In contrast to autophagosome formation, the mechanisms underlying autophagosome–lysosome fusion remain largely unknown. Here, we describe a novel autophagy regulator, inositol polyphosphate‐5‐phosphatase E (INPP5E), involved in autophagosome–lysosome fusion process. In neuronal cells, INPP5E knockdown strongly inhibited autophagy by impairing the fusion step. A fraction of INPP5E is localized to lysosomes, and its membrane anchoring and enzymatic activity are necessary for autophagy. INPP5E decreases lysosomal phosphatidylinositol 3,5‐bisphosphate (PI(3,5)P2), one of the substrates of the phosphatase, that counteracts cortactin‐mediated actin filament stabilization on lysosomes. Lysosomes require actin filaments on their surface for fusing with autophagosomes. INPP5E is one of the genes responsible for Joubert syndrome, a rare brain abnormality, and mutations found in patients with this disease caused defects in autophagy. Taken together, our data reveal a novel role of phosphoinositide on lysosomes and an association between autophagy and neuronal disease.  相似文献   

16.
Autophagy is a cellular response to starvation which generates autophagosomes to carry cellular organelles and long-lived proteins to lysosomes for degradation. Degradation through autophagy can provide an innate defence against virus infection, or conversely autophagosomes can promote infection by facilitating assembly of replicase proteins. We demonstrate that the avian coronavirus, Infectious Bronchitis Virus (IBV) activates autophagy. A screen of individual IBV non-structural proteins (nsps) showed that autophagy was activated by IBV nsp6. This property was shared with nsp6 of mammalian coronaviruses Mouse Hepatitis Virus, and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Virus, and the equivalent nsp5-7 of the arterivirus Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus. These multiple-spanning transmembrane proteins located to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where they generated Atg5 and LC3II-positive vesicles, and vesicle formation was dependent on Atg5 and class III PI3 kinase. The vesicles recruited double FYVE-domain containing protein (DFCP) indicating localised concentration of phosphatidylinositol 3 phosphate, and therefore shared many features with omegasomes formed from the ER in response to starvation. Omegasomes induced by viral nsp6 matured into autophagosomes that delivered LC3 to lysosomes and therefore recruited and recycled the proteins needed for autophagosome nucleation, expansion, cellular trafficking and delivery of cargo to lysosomes. The coronavirus nsp6 proteins activated omegasome and autophagosome formation independently of starvation, but activation did not involve direct inhibition of mTOR signalling, activation of sirtuin1 or induction of ER stress.  相似文献   

17.
《Autophagy》2013,9(11):1335-1347
Autophagy is a cellular response to starvation which generates autophagosomes to carry cellular organelles and long-lived proteins to lysosomes for degradation. Degradation through autophagy can provide an innate defence against virus infection, or conversely autophagosomes can promote infection by facilitating assembly of replicase proteins. We demonstrate that the avian coronavirus, Infectious Bronchitis Virus (IBV) activates autophagy. A screen of individual IBV non-structural proteins (nsps) showed that autophagy was activated by IBV nsp6. This property was shared with nsp6 of mammalian coronaviruses Mouse Hepatitis Virus, and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Virus, and the equivalent nsp5-7 of the arterivirus Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus. These multiple-spanning transmembrane proteins located to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where they generated Atg5 and LC3II-positive vesicles, and vesicle formation was dependent on Atg5 and class III PI3 kinase. The vesicles recruited double FYVE-domain containing protein (DFCP) indicating localised concentration of phosphatidylinositol 3 phosphate, and therefore shared many features with omegasomes formed from the ER in response to starvation. Omegasomes induced by viral nsp6 matured into autophagosomes that delivered LC3 to lysosomes and therefore recruited and recycled the proteins needed for autophagosome nucleation, expansion, cellular trafficking and delivery of cargo to lysosomes. The coronavirus nsp6 proteins activated omegasome and autophagosome formation independently of starvation, but activation did not involve direct inhibition of mTOR signalling, activation of sirtuin1 or induction of ER stress.  相似文献   

18.
Autophagy is an evolutionary conserved catabolic process involved in several physiological and pathological processes such as cancer and neurodegeneration. Autophagy initiation signaling requires both the ULK1 kinase and the BECLIN 1-VPS34 core complex to generate autophagosomes, double-membraned vesicles that transfer cellular contents to lysosomes. In this study, we show that the BECLIN 1-VPS34 complex is tethered to the cytoskeleton through an interaction between the BECLIN 1-interacting protein AMBRA1 and dynein light chains 1/2. When autophagy is induced, ULK1 phosphorylates AMBRA1, releasing the autophagy core complex from dynein. Its subsequent relocalization to the endoplasmic reticulum enables autophagosome nucleation. Therefore, AMBRA1 constitutes a direct regulatory link between ULK1 and BECLIN 1-VPS34, which is required for core complex positioning and activity within the cell. Moreover, our results demonstrate that in addition to a function for microtubules in mediating autophagosome transport, there is a strict and regulatory relationship between cytoskeleton dynamics and autophagosome formation.  相似文献   

19.
Epithelial wound healing in Drosophila involves the formation of multinucleate cells surrounding the wound. We show that autophagy, a cellular degradation process often deployed in stress responses, is required for the formation of a multinucleated syncytium during wound healing, and that autophagosomes that appear near the wound edge acquire plasma membrane markers. In addition, uncontrolled autophagy in the unwounded epidermis leads to the degradation of endo‐membranes and the lateral plasma membrane, while apical and basal membranes and epithelial barrier function remain intact. Proper functioning of TORC1 is needed to prevent destruction of the larval epidermis by autophagy, in a process that depends on phagophore initiation and expansion but does not require autophagosomes fusion with lysosomes. Autophagy induction can also affect other sub‐cellular membranes, as shown by its suppression of experimentally induced laminopathy‐like nuclear defects. Our findings reveal a function for TORC1‐mediated regulation of autophagy in maintaining membrane integrity and homeostasis in the epidermis and during wound healing.  相似文献   

20.
DRAM-1 encodes multiple isoforms that regulate autophagy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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