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1.
Autophagy is a catabolic cellular mechanism for entrapping cellular macromolecules and organelles in intracellular vesicles and degrading their contents by fusion with lysosomes. Important roles for autophagy have been elucidated for cell survival during nutrient insufficiency, eradication of intracellular pathogens, and counteracting aging through clearance of senescent proteins and mitochondria. Autophagic vesicles become decorated with LC3, a protein that mediates their fusion with lysosomes. LC3 is a substrate of the cysteine protease ATG4B (Autophagin-1), where cleavage generates a C-terminal glycine required for LC3 conjugation to lipids in autophagosomes. ATG4B both cleaves pro-LC3 and also hydrolyzes lipids from cleaved LC3. We show here that phosphorylation of ATG4B at Ser-383 and Ser-392 increases its hydrolyase activity as measured using LC3 as a substrate. Reconstituting atg4b−/− cells with phosphorylation-deficient ATG4B showed a role of ATG4B phosphorylation in LC3 delipidation and autophagic flux, thus demonstrating that the cellular activity of ATG4B is modulated by phosphorylation. Proteolytic conversion of pro-LC3 to LC3-I was not significantly impacted by ATG4B phosphorylation in cells. Phosphorylation-deficient ATG4B also showed reduced interactions with the lipid-conjugated LC3 but not unconjugated LC3. Taken together, these findings demonstrate a role for Ser-383 and Ser-392 phosphorylation of ATG4B in control of autophagy.  相似文献   

2.
The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase complex I (PI3K complex I) is a crucial regulator of autophagy, which contains Beclin 1 (or ATG6), ATG14L, VPS34 (or the class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and its adaptor VPS15) and AMBRA1, and controls autophagosome formation. In a paper recently published in Cell Research, Xia et al. report that during nutrient deprivation the ubiquitin E3 ligase RNF2 is recruited to the PI3K complex I, and ubiquitinates AMBRA1 to trigger its degradation and downregulate autophagy.Macroautophagy (hereafter called autophagy) is a lysosomal degradation pathway for cytoplasmic components1. The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is also critical during the process of autophagy. The formation of autophagosomes (double-membrane bound vacuoles that sequester cargo in bulk or in a selective manner before their delivery to the lysosomal compartment) depends on ubiquitination-like activity2. The selective removal of cargo (e.g., protein aggregates, organelles) by autophagy is dependent in many cases on the ubiquitination of the cargo3. Recent studies also indicate that ubiquitination regulates the activity of autophagy proteins that comprise autophagosomes4.Autophagosome formation is dependent on evolutionarily conserved ATG (autophagy-related) proteins initially identified in yeast2. These proteins function in complexes or functional modules on a membrane known as the phagophore that matures into the autophagosome via stages of initiation, elongation, and sealing. Phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate kinase complex I (PI3K complex I) plays a key role in the initiation step. In this complex, Beclin 1 (the mammalian homolog of yeast ATG6) interacts with ATG14L, AMBRA1, and class III PI3K or VPS342 (Figure 1). The activity of this complex, which produces the lipid phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P), is crucial to recruitment of ATG, which is required for the elongation and sealing of the autophagosomal membrane.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Role of RNF2 and WASH during autophagosome formation. Upon autophagy stimulation by nutrient deprivation, Beclin 1 forms a complex with VPS34 and its adaptor VPS15, ATG14L, and AMBRA1. In this complex, Beclin 1 is K63-polyubiquitylated (green circles) by the E3 ligase AMBRA1 to activate the production of PI3P by VPS34. The production of PI3P at the phagophore recruits WIPI proteins to trigger the ATG machinery to elongate and seal the membrane to form an autophagosome. After the induction of autophagy, WASH and RNF2 are recruited to downregulate the autophagy pathway by inhibiting the VPS34 activity. WASH negatively regulates autophagy through suppression of Beclin 1 K63-linked polyubiquitination whereas RNF2 is recruited to the complex via the Beclin 1 interactor WASH. RNF2 catalyzes K48-linked polyubiquitination (orange circles) of AMBRA1 to mediate its proteasomal degradation.Recently, Xia and colleagues5 demonstrate that RNF2 (also called Ring1B) regulates autophagosome formation in response to nutrient starvation by influencing the ubiquitination of AMBRA1. RNF2 is a member of the RING-domain ubiquitin E3 ligase family6. In a series of experiments involving two-hybrid screens with RNF2 as bait, Xia and colleagues5 showed that RNF2 interacts with AMBRA1 and that this interaction is enhanced upon autophagy stimulation in cells cultured in the absence of serum and amino acids. Deletion of RNF2 robustly stimulates autophagy in response to starvation whereas restoration of RNF2 in RNF2−/− mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) reduces autophagy. An RNF2 mutant with no E3 ligase activity does not impair autophagy in RNF2−/− MEFs. The authors further showed that RNF2 downregulates autophagy by promoting the degradation of AMBRA1. RNF2 catalyzes the K48-linked polyubiquitination of AMBRA1 which mediates its proteasomal degradation. The crucial site for AMBRA1 K48-linked polyubiquitination is lysine 45, and a K45R AMBRA1 mutant is not sensitive to RNF2-mediated ubiquitination and is able to sustain VPS34 activity and autophagy. Beclin 1 exists in different complexes involved in different steps of the autophagic pathway2. In the current study, the authors showed that RNF2 is associated with the PI3K complex 1 with Beclin 1 ATG14 and AMBRA1, a complex involved in early stage of autophagosome formation. Interestingly, in the absence of RNF2, the association of Beclin 1 with VPS34 in the PI3K complex 1 is enhanced.Recently, Fan''s group reported that AMBRA1-DDB1-CUL4A is the E3 ligase that mediates K63-linked ubiquitination of Beclin 1 to enhance its binding to VPS34 in response to starvation7. In the present study5, the group showed that the K63-linked ubiquitination of Beclin 1 is inhibited by RNF2. A screen identified WASH as an interactor of RNF2. WASH is part of a complex that promotes actin polymerization to facilitate endosomal protein sorting8 and has been recently shown to interact with Beclin 1 and to be associated with autophagosomal membrane7. This interaction impairs the AMBRA1-mediated K63 polyubiquitination of Beclin 1. WASH recruits RNF2 to AMBRA1 and the PI3K complex 1 in response to starvation. The absence of WASH abolishes the K48-linked polyubiquitination of AMBRA1. In addition, WASH overexpression partially impairs the interaction of AMBRA1 with Beclin1 to block its K63-linked polyubiquitination7. The study by Xia et al. reveals a novel layer of regulation: WASH recruits RNF2 to promote AMBRA1 degradation to impair Beclin 1 ubiquitination5. This work points to the complex role of ubiquitination in the regulation of the early stage of autophagy with a balance between activating K63-linked polyubiquitination of Beclin 1 and inhibitory K48-linked polyubiquitination of AMBRA1. These post-translational modifications depend on the activity of two E3 ligases, AMBRA1 and RNF2. This study also stresses the importance of AMBRA1 in stabilization of proteins engaged in the early stage of autophagosome formation via its E3 ligase activity with DDB1-CUL4A to enhance Beclin 1 association with VPS347 and with TRAF6 to stabilize ULK1, which acts in a complex upstream of the PI3K complex 1 in autophagy9. Finally, the study by Xia et al. emphasizes that autophagy must be tightly regulated to avoid deleterious effects on cell homeostasis.The present study raises several questions regarding how and when WASH and RNF2 are recruited to downregulate autophagy in response to starvation. Recently it has been shown that WASH is a positive modulator of autophagosome biogenesis in mammalian cells through regulation of endosomal trafficking of ATG9A10. Altogether, these findings suggest that the role of WASH in autophagy is dependent on its subcellular localization and its partners in intracellular membranes.  相似文献   

3.
BECN1/Beclin 1 is regarded as a critical component in the class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PtdIns3K) complex to trigger autophagy in mammalian cells. Despite its significant role in a number of cellular and physiological processes, the exact function of BECN1 in autophagy remains controversial. Here we created a BECN1 knockout human cell line using the TALEN technique. Surprisingly, the complete loss of BECN1 had little effect on LC3 (MAP1LC3B/LC3B) lipidation, and LC3B puncta resembling autophagosomes by fluorescence microscopy were still evident albeit significantly smaller than those in the wild-type cells. Electron microscopy (EM) analysis revealed that BECN1 deficiency led to malformed autophagosome-like structures containing multiple layers of membranes under amino acid starvation. We further confirmed that the PtdIns3K complex activity and autophagy flux were disrupted in BECN1−/− cells. Our results demonstrate the essential role of BECN1 in the functional formation of autophagosomes, but not in LC3B lipidation.  相似文献   

4.
Various retinal degenerative disorders manifest in alterations of the AKT/mTOR axis. Despite this, consensus on the therapeutic targeting of mTOR in degenerating retinas has not yet been achieved. Therefore, we investigated the role of AKT/mTOR signaling in rd16 retinas, in which we restored the AKT/mTOR axis by genetic ablation of pseudokinase TRB3, known to inhibit phosphorylation of AKT and mTOR. First, we found that TRB3 ablation resulted in preservation of photoreceptor function in degenerating retinas. Then, we learned that the mTOR downstream cellular pathways involved in the homeostasis of photoreceptors were also reprogrammed in rd16 TRB3−/− retinas. Thus, the level of inactivated translational repressor p-4E-BP1 was significantly increased in these mice along with the restoration of translational rate. Moreover, in rd16 mice manifesting decline in p-mTOR at P15, we found elevated expression of Beclin-1 and ATG5 autophagy genes. Thus, these mice showed impaired autophagy flux measured as an increase in LC3 conversion and p62 accumulation. In addition, the RFP-EGFP-LC3 transgene expression in rd16 retinas resulted in statistically fewer numbers of red puncta in photoreceptors, suggesting impaired late autophagic vacuoles. In contrast, TRIB3 ablation in these mice resulted in improved autophagy flux. The restoration of translation rate and the boost in autophagosome formation occurred concomitantly with an increase in total Ub and rhodopsin protein levels and the elevation of E3 ligase Parkin1. We propose that TRB3 may retard retinal degeneration and be a promising therapeutic target to treat various retinal degenerative disorders.Subject terms: Translation, Diseases  相似文献   

5.
Macroautophagy is a highly conserved intracellular bulk degradation system of all eukaryotic cells. It is governed by a large number of autophagy proteins (ATGs) and is crucial for many cellular processes. Here, we describe the phenotypes of Dictyostelium discoideum ATG16 and ATG9/16 cells and compare them to the previously reported ATG9 mutant. ATG16 deficiency caused an increase in the expression of several core autophagy genes, among them atg9 and the two atg8 paralogues. The single and double ATG9 and ATG16 knock-out mutants had complex phenotypes and displayed severe and comparable defects in pinocytosis and phagocytosis. Uptake of Legionella pneumophila was reduced. In addition, ATG9 and ATG16 cells had dramatic defects in autophagy, development and proteasomal activity which were much more severe in the ATG9/16 double mutant. Mutant cells showed an increase in poly-ubiquitinated proteins and contained large ubiquitin-positive protein aggregates which partially co-localized with ATG16-GFP in ATG9/16 cells. The more severe autophagic, developmental and proteasomal phenotypes of ATG9/16 cells imply that ATG9 and ATG16 probably function in parallel in autophagy and have in addition autophagy-independent functions in further cellular processes.  相似文献   

6.
Autophagosome formation requires multiple autophagy‐related (ATG) factors. However, we find that a subset of autophagy substrates remains robustly targeted to the lysosome in the absence of several core ATGs, including the LC3 lipidation machinery. To address this unexpected result, we performed genome‐wide CRISPR screens identifying genes required for NBR1 flux in ATG7KO cells. We find that ATG7‐independent autophagy still requires canonical ATG factors including FIP200. However, in the absence of LC3 lipidation, additional factors are required including TAX1BP1 and TBK1. TAX1BP1''s ability to cluster FIP200 around NBR1 cargo and induce local autophagosome formation enforces cargo specificity and replaces the requirement for lipidated LC3. In support of this model, we define a ubiquitin‐independent mode of TAX1BP1 recruitment to NBR1 puncta, highlighting that TAX1BP1 recruitment and clustering, rather than ubiquitin binding per se, is critical for function. Collectively, our data provide a mechanistic basis for reports of selective autophagy in cells lacking the lipidation machinery, wherein receptor‐mediated clustering of upstream autophagy factors drives continued autophagosome formation.  相似文献   

7.

Background

Recent studies have suggested that autophagy is utilized by cells as a protective mechanism against Listeria monocytogenes infection.

Methodology/Principal Findings

However we find autophagy has no measurable role in vacuolar escape and intracellular growth in primary cultured bone marrow derived macrophages (BMDMs) deficient for autophagy (atg5−/−). Nevertheless, we provide evidence that the pore forming activity of the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin listeriolysin O (LLO) can induce autophagy subsequent to infection by L. monocytogenes. Infection of BMDMs with L. monocytogenes induced microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) lipidation, consistent with autophagy activation, whereas a mutant lacking LLO did not. Infection of BMDMs that express LC3-GFP demonstrated that wild-type L. monocytogenes was encapsulated by LC3-GFP, consistent with autophagy activation, whereas a mutant lacking LLO was not. Bacillus subtilis expressing either LLO or a related cytolysin, perfringolysin O (PFO), induced LC3 colocalization and LC3 lipidation. Further, LLO-containing liposomes also recruited LC3-GFP, indicating that LLO was sufficient to induce targeted autophagy in the absence of infection. The role of autophagy had variable effects depending on the cell type assayed. In atg5−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts, L. monocytogenes had a primary vacuole escape defect. However, the bacteria escaped and grew normally in atg5−/− BMDMs.

Conclusions/Significance

We propose that membrane damage, such as that caused by LLO, triggers bacterial-targeted autophagy, although autophagy does not affect the fate of wild-type intracellular L. monocytogenes in primary BMDMs.  相似文献   

8.
Activation of TLR signaling has been shown to induce autophagy in antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Using high-resolution microscopy approaches, we show that in LPS-stimulated dendritic cells (DCs), autophagosomes emerge from MHC class II compartments (MIICs) and harbor both the molecular machinery for antigen processing and the autophagosome markers LC3 and ATG16L1. This ENdosome-Mediated Autophagy (ENMA) appears to be the major type of autophagy in DCs, as similar structures were observed upon established autophagy-inducing conditions (nutrient deprivation, rapamycin) and under basal conditions in the presence of bafilomycin A1. Autophagosome formation was not significantly affected in DCs expressing ATG4BC74A mutant and atg4b−/− bone marrow DCs, but the degradation of the autophagy substrate SQSTM1/p62 was largely impaired. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the previously described DC aggresome-like LPS-induced structures (DALIS) contain vesicular membranes, and in addition to SQSTM1 and ubiquitin, they are positive for LC3. LC3 localization on DALIS is independent of its lipidation. MIIC-driven autophagosomes preferentially engulf the LPS-induced SQSTM1-positive DALIS, which become later degraded in autolysosomes. DALIS-associated membranes also contain ATG16L1, ATG9 and the Q-SNARE VTI1B, suggesting that they may represent (at least in part) a membrane reservoir for autophagosome expansion. We propose that ENMA constitutes an unconventional, APC-specific type of autophagy, which mediates the processing and presentation of cytosolic antigens by MHC class II machinery, and/or the selective clearance of toxic by-products of elevated ROS/RNS production in activated DCs, thereby promoting their survival.  相似文献   

9.
Removal of ubiquitinated targets by autophagosomes can be mediated by receptor molecules, like SQSTM1, in a mechanism referred to as selective autophagy. While cytoplasmic protein aggregates, mitochondria, and bacteria are the best-known targets of selective autophagy, their role in the turnover of membrane receptors is scarce. We here showed that fasting-induced wasting of skeletal muscle involves remodeling of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) by increasing the turnover of muscle-type CHRN (cholinergic receptor, nicotinic/nicotinic acetylcholine receptor) in a TRIM63-dependent manner. Notably, this process implied enhanced production of endo/lysosomal carriers of CHRN, which also contained the membrane remodeler SH3GLB1, the E3 ubiquitin ligase, TRIM63, and the selective autophagy receptor SQSTM1. Furthermore, these vesicles were surrounded by the autophagic marker MAP1LC3A in an ATG7-dependent fashion, and some of them were also positive for the lysosomal marker, LAMP1. While the amount of vesicles containing endocytosed CHRN strongly augmented in the absence of ATG7 as well as upon denervation as a model for long-term atrophy, denervation-induced increase in autophagic CHRN vesicles was completely blunted in the absence of TRIM63. On a similar note, in trim63−/− mice denervation-induced upregulation of SQSTM1 and LC3-II was abolished and endogenous SQSTM1 did not colocalize with CHRN vesicles as it did in the wild type. SQSTM1 and LC3-II coprecipitated with surface-labeled/endocytosed CHRN and SQSTM1 overexpression significantly induced CHRN vesicle formation. Taken together, our data suggested that selective autophagy regulates the basal and atrophy-induced turnover of the pentameric transmembrane protein, CHRN, and that TRIM63, together with SH3GLB1 and SQSTM1 regulate this process.  相似文献   

10.
验证从三白草中提取的两个化合物XGN56和XGN59对自噬关键蛋白ATG4B酶活性的影响及对自噬的调节作用。分子对接的方法验证化合物与游离ATG4B及ATG4B-LC3复合体的氢键结合作用;SDS-PAGE法及荧光共振能量转移法(FRET)测定化合物(10μmol/L)抑制ATG4B的IC50值;LC3融合GFP荧光标签检测化合物(10μmol/L)对LC3荧光聚集的影响,并设置正常组、给药组和药物联用Baf(0.5μmol/L)组;过表达GFP-LC3的WT-MEF及ATG5-/--MEF细胞检测化合物诱导LC3荧光点的情况。结果显示,XGN56和XGN59能分别与游离ATG4B和ATG4B-LC3复合体形成氢键作用,且两者均能剂量依赖地抑制ATG4B的酶切活性,体外IC50分别为7.74μmol/L和8.00μmol/L,同时能够ATG5依赖地促进GFP标记的自噬体的生成(P<0.001)。结果表明,两个化合物可能是通过一定程度地抑制ATG4B的酶活性从而促进细胞自噬水平。  相似文献   

11.
ATG4 plays a key role in autophagy induction, but the methods for monitoring ATG4 activity in living cells are limited. Here we designed a novel fluorescent peptide named AU4S for noninvasive detection of ATG4 activity in living cells, which consists of the cell-penetrating peptide (CPP), ATG4-recognized sequence “GTFG,” and the fluorophore FITC. Additionally, an ATG4-resistant peptide AG4R was used as a control. CPP can help AU4S or AG4R to penetrate cell membrane efficiently. AU4S but not AG4R can be recognized and cleaved by ATG4, leading to the change of fluorescence intensity. Therefore, the difference between AU4S- and AG4R-measured fluorescence values in the same sample, defined as “F-D value,” can reflect ATG4 activity. By detecting the F-D values, we found that ATG4 activity paralleled LC3B-II levels in rapamycin-treated cells, but neither paralleled LC3B-II levels in starved cells nor presented a correlation with LC3B-II accumulation in WBCs from healthy donors or leukemia patients. However, when DTT was added to the system, ATG4 activity not only paralleled LC3B-II levels in starved cells in the presence or absence of autophagy inhibitors, but also presented a positive correlation with LC3B-II accumulation in WBCs from leukemia patients (R2 = 0.5288). In conclusion, this study provides a convenient, rapid, and quantitative method to monitor ATG4 activity in living cells, which may be beneficial to basic and clinical research on autophagy.  相似文献   

12.
ATG4B facilitates autophagy by promoting autophagosome maturation through the reversible lipidation and delipidation of LC3. Recent reports have shown that phosphorylation of ATG4B regulates its activity and LC3 processing, leading to modulate autophagy activity. However, the mechanism about how ATG4B phosphorylation is involved in amino acid deprivation-induced autophagy is unclear. Here, we combined the tandem affinity purification with mass spectrometry (MS) and identified the ATG4B-interacting proteins including its well-known partner gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-associated protein (GABARAP, a homolog of LC3) and phosphofructokinase 1 platelet isoform (PFKP). Further immunoprecipitation assays showed that amino acid deprivation strengthened the interaction between ATG4B and PFKP. By genetic depletion of PFKP using CRISPR/Cas9, we uncovered that PFKP loss reduced the degradation of LC3-II and p62 due to a partial block in autophagic flux. Furthermore, MS analysis of Flag-tagged ATG4B immunoprecipitates identified phosphorylation of ATG4B serine 34 residue (S34) and PFKP serine 386 residue (S386) under amino acid deprivation condition. In vitro kinase assay validated that PFKP functioning as a protein kinase phosphorylated ATG4B at S34. This phosphorylation could enhance ATG4B activity and p62 degradation. In addition, PFKP S386 phosphorylation was important to ATG4B S34 phosphorylation and autophagy in HEK293T cells. In brief, our findings describe that PFKP, a rate-limiting enzyme in the glycolytic pathway, functions as a protein kinase for ATG4B to regulate ATG4B activity and autophagy under amino acid deprivation condition.  相似文献   

13.
We recently reported that BAG6/BAT3 (BCL2-associated athanogene 6) is essential for basal and starvation-induced autophagy in E18.5 bag6−/− mouse embryos and in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) through the modulation of the EP300/p300-dependent acetylation of TRP53 and autophagy-related (ATG) proteins. We observed that BAG6 increases TRP53 acetylation during starvation and pro-autophagic TRP53-target gene expression. BAG6 also decreases the EP300 dependent-acetylation of ATG5, ATG7, and LC3-I, posttranslational modifications that inhibit autophagy. In addition, in the absence of BAG6 or when using a mutant of BAG6 exclusively located in the cytoplasm, autophagy is inhibited, ATG7 is hyperacetylated, TRP53 acetylation is abrogated, and EP300 accumulates in the cytoplasm indicating that BAG6 is involved in the regulation of the nuclear localization of EP300. We also reported that the interaction between BAG6 and EP300 occurs in the cytoplasm rather than the nucleus. Moreover, during starvation, EP300 is transported to the nucleus in a BAG6-dependent manner. We concluded that BAG6 regulates autophagy by controlling the localization of EP300 and its accessibility to nuclear (TRP53) and cytoplasmic (ATGs) substrates.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Autophagy and the ubiquitin proteasome system are the two major cellular processes for protein and organelle recycling and clearance in eukaryotic cells. Evidence is accumulating that these two pathways are interrelated through adaptor proteins. Here, we found that PSMD1 and PSMD2, both components of the 19S regulatory particle of the proteasome, directly interact with Dictyostelium discoideum autophagy 16 (ATG16), a core autophagosomal protein. ATG16 is composed of an N-terminal domain, which is responsible for homo-dimerization and binding to ATG5 and a C-terminal β-propeller structure. Deletion analysis of ATG16 showed that the N-terminal half of ATG16 interacted directly only with PSMD1, while the C-terminal half interacted with both, PSMD1 and PSMD2. RFP-tagged PSMD1 as well as PSMD2 were enriched in large puncta, reminiscent of autophagosomes, in wild-type cells. These puncta were absent in atg16 ̄ and atg9 ̄/16 ̄ cells and weaker and less frequent in atg9 ̄ cells, showing that ATG16 was crucial and the autophagic process important for their formation. Co-expression of ATG16-GFP or GFP-ATG8a(LC3) with RFP-PSMD1 or RFP-PSMD2, respectively, in atg16 ̄ or wild-type cells revealed many instances of co-localization, suggesting that RFP-PSMD1 or RFP-PSMD2 positive puncta constitute autophagosomes. LysoTracker® labeling and a proteolytic cleavage assay confirmed that PSMD1 and PSMD2 were present in lysosomes in wild-type cells. In vivo, ATG16 is required for their enrichment in ATG8a positive puncta, which mature into autolysosomes. We propose that ATG16 links autophagy and the ubiquitin proteasome system.  相似文献   

17.
Cathepsin E is an endosomal aspartic proteinase that is predominantly expressed in immune-related cells. Recently, we showed that macrophages derived from cathepsin E-deficient (CatE −/−) mice display accumulation of lysosomal membrane proteins and abnormal membrane trafficking. In this study, we demonstrated that CatE −/− macrophages exhibit abnormalities in autophagy, a bulk degradation system for aggregated proteins and damaged organelles. CatE −/− macrophages showed increased accumulation of autophagy marker proteins such as LC3 and p62, and polyubiquitinated proteins. Cathepsin E deficiency also altered autophagy-related signaling pathways such as those mediated by the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), Akt, and extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK). Furthermore, immunofluorescence microscopy analyses showed that LC3-positive vesicles were merged with acidic compartments in wild-type macrophages, but not in CatE −/− macrophages, indicating inhibition of fusion of autophagosome with lysosomes in CatE −/− cells. Delayed degradation of LC3 protein was also observed under starvation-induced conditions. Since the autophagy system is involved in the degradation of damaged mitochondria, we examined the accumulation of damaged mitochondria in CatE −/− macrophages. Several mitochondrial abnormalities such as decreased intracellular ATP levels, depolarized mitochondrial membrane potential, and decreased mitochondrial oxygen consumption were observed. Such mitochondrial dysfunction likely led to the accompanying oxidative stress. In fact, CatE −/− macrophages showed increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and up-regulation of oxidized peroxiredoxin-6, but decreased antioxidant glutathione. These results indicate that cathepsin E deficiency causes autophagy impairment concomitantly with increased aberrant mitochondria as well as increased oxidative stress.  相似文献   

18.
The identification of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) susceptibility genes by genome-wide association has linked this pathology to autophagy, a lysosomal degradation pathway that is crucial for cell and tissue homeostasis. Here, we describe autophagy-related 4B, cysteine peptidase/autophagin-1 (ATG4B) as an essential protein in the control of inflammatory response during experimental colitis. In this pathological condition, ATG4B protein levels increase in parallel with the induction of autophagy. Moreover, ATG4B expression is significantly reduced in affected areas of the colon from IBD patients. Consistently, atg4b−/− mice present Paneth cell abnormalities, as well as an increased susceptibility to DSS-induced colitis. atg4b-deficient mice exhibit significant alterations in proinflammatory cytokines and mediators of the immune response to bacterial infections, which are reminiscent of those found in patients with Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis. Additionally, antibiotic treatments and bone marrow transplantation from wild-type mice reduced colitis in atg4b−/− mice. Taken together, these results provided additional evidence for the importance of autophagy in intestinal pathologies and describe ATG4B as a novel protective protein in inflammatory colitis. Finally, we propose that atg4b-null mice are a suitable model for in vivo studies aimed at testing new therapeutic strategies for intestinal diseases associated with autophagy deficiency.  相似文献   

19.
Atg4 cysteine proteases (autophagins) play crucial roles in autophagy by proteolytic activation of Atg8 paralogs for targeting to autophagic vesicles by lipid conjugation, as well as in subsequent deconjugation reactions. However, the means to measure the activity of autophagins is limited. Herein, we describe two novel substrates for autophagins suitable for a diversity of in vitro assays, including (i) fluorogenic tetrapeptide acetyl-Gly-L-Thr-L-Phe-Gly-AFC (Ac-GTFG-AFC) and (ii) a fusion protein comprised of the natural substrate LC3B appended to the N-terminus of phospholipase A2 (LC3B-PLA2), which upon cleavage releases active PLA2 for fluorogenic assay. To generate the synthetic tetrapeptide substrate, the preferred tetrapeptide sequence recognized by autophagin-1/Atg4B was determined using a positional scanning combinatorial fluorogenic tetrapeptide library. With the LC3B-PLA2 substrate, we show that mutation of the glycine proximal to the scissile bond in LC3B abolishes activity. Both substrates showed high specificity for recombinant purified autophagin-1/Atg4B compared to closely related proteases and the LC3B-PLA2 substrate afforded substantially higher catalytic rates (kcat/Km 5.26 × 105 M−1/sec−1) than Ac-GTFG-AFC peptide (0.92 M−1/sec−1), consistent with substrate-induced activation. Studies of autophagin-1 mutants were also performed, including the protease lacking a predicted autoinhibitory domain at residues 1 to 24 and lacking a regulatory loop at residues 259 to 262. The peptide and fusion protein substrates were also employed for measuring autophagin activity in cell lysates, showing a decrease in cells treated with autophagin-1/Atg4B siRNA or transfected with a plasmid encoding Atg4B (Cys74Ala) dominant-negative. Therefore, the synthetic substrates for autophagins reported here provide new research tools for studying autophagy.Key words: autophagin, fluorogenic assay, tetrapeptide, phospholipase A2, LC3  相似文献   

20.
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