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1.
Ponpuak M  Deretic V 《Autophagy》2011,7(3):336-337
In a manifestation of the immunological autophagy termed xenophagy, autophagic adapter proteins such as p62 and NDP52 directly capture microbes for delivery to autophagosomal organelles where they are eliminated. In a mirror image phenomenon, which is also an immunological variant of the process termed decryption, p62 and autophagy contribute to the elimination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. During decryption, p62 sequesters cytosolic proteins into autophagosomes where they are proteolytically converted into peptides termed cryptides. A subset of cryptides possesses antimicrobial peptide properties exhibited upon their delivery to parasitophorous vacuoles where they kill intracellular microbes.Key words: autophagy, tuberculosis, ribosome, ubiquitin, antimicrobial peptidesAutophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cytoplasm-homeostatic process with a multitude of functions supporting, for the most part, cellular viability. During autophagy, cytoplasmic targets ranging from protein aggregates to whole organelles such as mitochondria and intracellular microbes are sequestered into a double-membrane bound organelle called the autophagosome. Autophagosomes mature into autolysosomes through fusion with lysosomes or their transport intermediates, bringing about acidification and acquisition of hydrolases leading to the digestion of the captured substrates. It is generally assumed that autophagy produces terminal degradative products such as free amino acids that are then used by the cell or the body as nutrients at times of starvation. Recently, we have discovered that autophagy generates, by proteolysis of captured cytosolic proteins, a mixture of peptides conferring potential cryptic biological functions, termed “cryptides.” Some of the cryptides with thus far assigned biological functions are the neo-antimicrobial peptides liberated from innocuous cytoplasmic proteins such as the ribosomal protein precursor FAU and ubiquitin.Our study was motivated by the search for factors or ingredients that make autophagic organelles particularly mycobactericidal, as Mycobacterium tuberculosis can survive the environment of the conventional phagolysosome. This was shown in the 1970s by the classical work of Armstrong and D''Arcy Hart at the same time when these authors established the more broadly appreciated and well-ingrained reputation of the tubercle bacillus as inhibiting the conventional phagosome-lysosome fusion. The approach to identifying such hypothetical ingredients was to first examine the steps of the autophagic pathway that are necessary for the mycobactericidal nature of macrophages induced for autophagy by, for example, starvation. We have found that not only are all stages of autophagy (initiation, elongation/closure and maturation) required for full mycobactericidal potency, but that p62, the first autophagic adapter characterized by the Johansen group, and also known as sequestosome 1, is absolutely required for autophagic elimination of M. tuberculosis. Sequestosome 1/p62 recognizes ubiquitinated protein aggregates and possibly ubiquitinated depolarized mitochondria and other targets, and delivers them to nascent autophagosomes; p62 also binds to the mammalian Atg8 paralog LC3 via its LC3-interaction region (LIR), thus conveniently bridging the targets with forming phagophores.At first blush, it may seem that mycobacteria follow the same fate demonstrated for several other bacteria, whereby p62 or another autophagic adapter, NDP52, capture cytosolic microbes and deliver them to autophagosomes. For example, the fraction of Salmonellae that are no longer retained within phagosomes and are free in the cytosol, or Shigella and Listeria that actively escape into the cytosol, are associated with ubiquitinated material or become otherwise recognized by p62 or NDP52, and end up being sequestered into autophagosomes. However, we found no evidence for p62 acting directly to transfer intraphagosomal mycobacteria into autophagic vacuoles. Instead, we observed p62-positive organelles as periodically fusing with mycobacterial phagosomes. At the same time, we found by imaging and biochemical means that proteins recruited by p62 from the cytosol into conventional autophagic organelles are subsequently transferred to model (latex bead phagosomes formed upon feeding 1 µm beads to macrophages) or mycobacterial phagosomes, as they gradually acquire autolysosomal characteristics. Next, we established that p62-captured cytosolic proteins (ribosomal protein rpS30 precursor FAU and ubiquitin) are proteolytically degraded into smaller peptides, and that specific peptides from these complex mixtures show antimycobacterial activity. Thus, the emerging model posits that autophagy captures cytosolic proteins and converts them into neo-antimycobacterial peptides that can then kill M. tuberculosis upon delivery to mycobacteria-containing phagosomes, which in turn gradually acquire autolysosomal properties (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Elimination of M. tuberculosis by autophagy and p62. Mycobacteria are phagocytosed by macrophages and at least for some time reside within phagosomes. Upon induction of autophagy, p62, as a bifunctional agent interacting with autophagic substrates and with LC3, recruits into autophagosomes pre-antimicrobicidal cytosolic substrates. Autophagosome maturation including acquisition of lysosomal hydrolases leads to the proteolytic cleavage of p62 substrates and their conversion into peptides (cryptides) that can act as antimicrobial peptides.In contrast to the direct mechanism of capturing bacteria employed in some instances described above, in the case of M. tuberculosis, an organism that resides within the phagosomes, the adapter molecule p62 exerts its anti-microbial action through an indirect, but rather sophisticated mechanism. By sequestering into autophagosomes the initially harmless cytosolic components and by proteolytically processing them within maturing autophagosomes, p62 and autophagy liberate antimicrobial peptides from the otherwise innocuous substrates. This amounts to a resourceful utilization by the cell of otherwise spent or to-be-discarded cytoplasmic proteins and gives them an after-function upon completion of their “day jobs” that they performed as whole proteins.Our studies have uncovered a previously unappreciated function for autophagy in generating neo-antimicrobial peptides, and perhaps also opened the prospect for other biological functions potentially engendered by the products of autophagic proteolysis. Given that autophagy has the capacity to capture en masse and subject to digestion large sections of the cytoplasm, most cellular proteins are undergoing, or can undergo, processing into peptides or peptide intermediates within autophagic organelles. We postulate that the antimicrobial peptide production revealed in our studies thus far is only one manifestation of a spectrum of potential biological functions of cryptides generated by autophagy.  相似文献   

2.
《Autophagy》2013,9(3):336-337
In a manifestation of the immunological autophagy termed xenophagy, autophagic adapter proteins such as p62 and NDP52 directly capture microbes for delivery to autophagosomal organelles where they are eliminated. In a mirror image phenomenon, which is also an immunological variant of the process termed decryption, p62 and autophagy contribute to the elimination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. During decryption, p62 sequesters cytosolic proteins into autophagosomes where they are proteolytically converted into peptides termed cryptides. A subset of cryptides possesses antimicrobial peptide properties exhibited upon their delivery to parasitophorous vacuoles where they kill intracellular microbes.  相似文献   

3.
Proteotoxicity resulting from accumulation of damaged/unwanted proteins contributes prominently to cellular aging and neurodegeneration. Proteasomal removal of these proteins upon covalent polyubiquitination is highly regulated. Recent reports proposed a role for autophagy in clearance of diffuse ubiquitinated proteins delivered by p62/SQSTM1. Here, we compared the turnover dynamics of endogenous ubiquitinated proteins by proteasomes and autophagy by assessing the effect of their inhibitors. Autophagy inhibitors bafilomycin A1, ammonium chloride, and 3-methyladenine failed to increase ubiquitinated protein levels. The proteasome inhibitor epoxomicin raised ubiquitinated protein levels at least 3-fold higher than the lysosomotropic agent chloroquine. These trends were observed in SK-N-SH cells under serum or serum-free conditions and in WT or Atg5(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Notably, chloroquine considerably inhibited proteasomes in SK-N-SH cells and MEFs. In these cells, elevation of p62/SQSTM1 was greater upon proteasome inhibition than with all autophagy inhibitors tested and was reduced in Atg5(-/-) MEFs. With epoxomicin, soluble p62/SQSTM1 associated with proteasomes and p62/SQSTM1 aggregates contained inactive proteasomes, ubiquitinated proteins, and autophagosomes. Prolonged autophagy inhibition (96 h) failed to elevate ubiquitinated proteins in rat cortical neurons, although epoxomicin did. Moreover, prolonged autophagy inhibition in cortical neurons markedly increased p62/SQSTM1, supporting its degradation mainly by autophagy and not by proteasomes. In conclusion, we clearly demonstrate that pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of autophagy fails to elevate ubiquitinated proteins unless the proteasome is affected. We also provide strong evidence that p62/SQSTM1 associates with proteasomes and that autophagy degrades p62/SQSTM1. Overall, the function of p62/SQSTM1 in the proteasomal pathway and autophagy requires further elucidation.  相似文献   

4.
Paget disease of bone (PDB) is a common disorder characterized by focal and disorganized increases of bone turnover. Genetic factors are important in the pathogenesis of PDB. We and others recently mapped the third locus associated with the disorder, PDB3, at 5q35-qter. In the present study, by use of 24 French Canadian families and 112 unrelated subjects with PDB, the PDB3 locus was confined to approximately 300 kb. Within this interval, two disease-related haplotype signatures were observed in 11 families and 18 unrelated patients. This region encoded the ubiquitin-binding protein sequestosome 1 (SQSTM1/p62), which is a candidate gene for PDB because of its association with the NF-kappaB pathway. Screening SQSTM1/p62 for mutations led to the identification of a recurrent nonconservative change (P392L) flanking the ubiquitin-associated domain (UBA) (position 394-440) of the protein that was not present in 291 control individuals. Our data demonstrate that two independent mutational events at the same position in SQSTM1/p62 caused PDB in a high proportion of French Canadian patients.  相似文献   

5.
Jiao Yang  Hong Peng  Yumin Xu 《Autophagy》2018,14(6):1072-1073
The alterations in cellular ubiquitin (Ub) homeostasis, known as Ub stress, feature and affect cellular responses in multiple conditions, yet the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. We recently reported that the macroautophagy/autophagy receptor SQSTM1/p62, functions as a novel Ub sensor to activate autophagy upon Ub+ stress (upregulation of the Ub level). First, SQSTM1 was found to undergo extensive ubiquitination and activate autophagy under Ub+ stress induced by prolonged Bortezomib (BTZ) treatment, Ub overexpression or by heat shock. Mechanistically, Ubiquitination of SQSTM1 disrupts its dimerization of the UBA domain, switching it from an auto-inhibitory conformation to recognize poly-ubiquitinated cargoes, promoting autophagic flux. Interestingly, Ub+ stress-responsive SQSTM1 ubiquitination is mediated by Ub conjugating enzymes, UBE2D2/3, in a unique E2-dependent manner. Our work has thus revealed a novel mechanism for how SQSTM1 senses cellular Ub stress conditions and regulates selective autophagy in response to diverse intrinsic or extrinsic challenges.  相似文献   

6.
Mutations of the p62/Sequestosome 1 gene (p62/SQSTM1) account for both sporadic and familial forms of Paget's disease of bone (PDB). We originally described a methionine-->valine substitution at codon 404 (M404V) of exon 8, in the ubiquitin protein-binding domain of p62/SQSTM1 gene in an Italian PDB patient. The collection of data from the patient's pedigree provided evidence for a familial form of PDB. Extension of the genetic analysis to other relatives in this family demonstrated segregation of the M404V mutation with the polyostotic PDB phenotype and provided the identification of six asymptomatic gene carriers. DNA for mutational analysis of the exon 8 coding sequence was obtained from 22 subjects, 4 PDB patients and 18 clinically unaffected members. Of the five clinically ascertained affected members of the family, four possessed the M404V mutation and exhibited the polyostotic form of PDB, except one patient with a single X-ray-assessed skeletal localization and one with a polyostotic disease who had died several years before the DNA analysis. By both reconstitution and mutational analysis of the pedigree, six unaffected subjects were shown to bear the M404V mutation, representing potential asymptomatic gene carriers whose circulating levels of alkaline phosphatase were recently assessed as still within the normal range. Taken together, these results support a genotype-phenotype correlation between the M404V mutation in the p62/SQSTM1 gene and a polyostotic form of PDB in this family. The high penetrance of the PDB trait in this family together with the study of the asymptomatic gene carriers will allow us to confirm the proposed genotype-phenotype correlation and to evaluate the potential use of mutational analysis of the p62/SQSTM1 gene in the early detection of relatives at risk for PDB.  相似文献   

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The serine/threonine protein kinase phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) plays a central role in cellular signaling by phosphorylating members of the AGC family of kinases, including PKB/Akt. We now present evidence showing that PDK1 is essential for the motility of vascular endothelial cells (ECs) and that it is involved in the regulation of their chemotaxis. ECs differentiated from mouse embryonic stem cells lacking PDK1 completely lost their ability to migrate in vitro in response to vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A). In addition, PDK1(-/-) embryoid bodies exhibit evident developmental and vascular defects that can be attributed to a reduced cell migration. Moreover, the overexpression of PDK1 increased the EC migration induced by VEGF-A. We propose a model of spatial distribution of PDK1 and Akt in which the synthesis of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5 triphosphate at plasma membrane by activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase recruits both proteins at the leading edge of the polarized ECs and promotes cell chemotaxis. These findings establish a mechanism for the spatial localization of PDK1 and its substrate Akt to regulate directional migration.  相似文献   

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AZD8055 is an ATP-competitive inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) that forms two multiprotein complexes, mTORC1 and mTORC2, and negatively regulates autophagy. We demonstrate that AZD8055 stimulates and potentiates chemotherapy-mediated autophagy, as shown by LC3I-II conversion and down-regulation of the ubiquitin-binding protein p62/sequestosome 1. AZD8055-induced autophagy was pro-survival as shown by its ability to attenuate cell death and DNA damage (p-H2AX), and to enhance clonogenic survival by cytotoxic chemotherapy. Autophagy inhibition by siRNA against Beclin 1 or LC3B, or by chloroquine, partially reversed the cytoprotective effect of AZD8055 that was independent of cell cycle inhibition. The pro-survival role of autophagy was confirmed using ectopic expression of Beclin 1 that conferred cytoprotection. To determine whether autophagy-mediated down-regulation of p62/sequestosome 1 contributes to its pro-survival role, we generated p62 knockdown cells using shRNA that showed protection from chemotherapy-induced cell death and DNA damage. We also overexpressed wild-type (wt) p62 that promoted chemotherapy-induced cell death, whereas mutated p62 at functional domains (PB1, UBA) failed to do so. The ability of ectopic wt p62 to promote cell death was blocked by AZD8055. AZD8055 was shown to inhibit phosphorylation of the autophagy-initiating kinase ULK1 at Ser(757) and inhibited known targets of mTORC1 (p-mTOR Ser(2448), p70S6K, p-S6, p4EBP1) and mTORC2 (p-mTOR Ser(2481), p-AKT Ser(473)). Knockdown of mTOR, but not Raptor or Rictor, reduced p-ULK1 at Ser(757) and enhanced chemotherapy-induced autophagy that resulted in a similar cytoprotective effect as shown for AZD8055. In conclusion, AZD8055 inhibits mTOR kinase and ULK1 phosphorylation to induce autophagy whose pro-survival effect is due, in part, to down-regulation of p62.  相似文献   

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PDK1 functions as a master kinase, phosphorylating and activating PKB/Akt, S6K and RSK. To learn more about the roles of PDK1, we generated mice that either lack PDK1 or possess PDK1 hypomorphic alleles, expressing only approximately 10% of the normal level of PDK1. PDK1(-/-) embryos die at embryonic day 9.5, displaying multiple abnormalities including lack of somites, forebrain and neural crest derived tissues; however, development of hind- and midbrain proceed relatively normally. In contrast, hypomorphic PDK1 mice are viable and fertile, and insulin injection induces the normal activation of PKB, S6K and RSK. Nevertheless, these mice are 40-50% smaller than control animals. The organ volumes from the PDK1 hypomorphic mice are reduced proportionately. We also establish that the volume of a number of PDK1-deficient cells is reduced by 35-60%, and show that PDK1 deficiency does not affect cell number, nuclear size or proliferation. We provide genetic evidence that PDK1 is essential for mouse embryonic development, and regulates cell size independently of cell number or proliferation, as well as insulin's ability to activate PKB, S6K and RSK.  相似文献   

15.
YouJin Lee  Conrad C. Weihl 《Autophagy》2017,13(9):1615-1616
Macroautophagy/autophagy can be a selective degradative process via the utilization of various autophagic receptor proteins. Autophagic receptors selectively recognize ubiquitinated cargoes and deliver them to phagophores, the precursors to autophagosomes, for their degradation. For example, SQSTM1/p62 directly binds to ubiquitinated protein aggregates via its UBA domain and sequesters them into inclusion bodies via its PB1 domain. SQSTM1also interacts with phagophores via its LC3-interacting (LIR) motif. However, a regulatory mechanism for autophagic receptors is not yet understood.  相似文献   

16.
Sequestosome 1/p62 is a signal modulator or adaptor protein involved in receptor-mediated signal transduction. Sequestosome 1/p62 is gaining attention as it is involved in several diseases including Parkinson disease, Alzheimer disease, liver and breast cancer, Paget's disease of bone, obesity and insulin resistance. In this review, we will focus on the most recent advances on the physiological function of p62 relevant to human diseases.  相似文献   

17.
Selective macroautophagy (autophagy) of ubiquitinated protein is implicated as a compensatory mechanism of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. p62/SQSTM1 is a key molecule managing autophagic clearance of polyubiquitinated proteins. However, little is known about mechanisms controlling autophagic degradation of polyubiquitinated proteins. Here, we show that the specific phosphorylation of p62 at serine 403 (S403) in its ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domain increases the affinity between UBA and polyubiquitin chain, resulting in efficiently targeting polyubiquitinated proteins in "sequestosomes" and stabilizing sequestosome structure as a cargo of ubiquitinated proteins for autophagosome entry. Casein kinase 2 (CK2) phosphorylates S403 of p62 directly. Furthermore, CK2 overexpression or phosphatase inhibition reduces the formation of inclusion bodies of the polyglutamine-expanded huntingtin exon1 fragment in a p62-dependent manner. We propose that phosphorylation of p62 at S403 regulates autophagic clearance of ubiquitinated proteins and protein aggregates that are poorly degraded by proteasomes.  相似文献   

18.
Upon infection of a cell by Salmonella, p62/Sqstm1 assembles on the microbes; simultaneously, p62/Sqstm1 is phosphorylated at Ser351, leading to inactivation of Keap1, which is responsible for degrading Nrf2. Thus, cytoprotective Nrf2 targets are induced at the same time that autophagosomes entrap the microbes (xenophagy). However, the detailed role of p62/Sqstm1 during xenophagy has remained unclear. Here we show that translocation of p62/Sqstm1 to invasive Salmonella precedes Ser351 phosphorylation. Furthermore, in addition to Ser351 phosphorylation, oligomerization of p62/Sqstm1 is also required for localization of Keap1 onto microbes, which is followed by Nrf2 activation. Our data reveal the sequential dynamics of p62/Sqstm1 in response to bacterial infection.  相似文献   

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