Lecture 13: Autophagy Flashcards
What is autophagy?
- Removal of protein aggregates, old n damaged organelles n invading microbes
- Can be used in developmental remodeling, providing AA, nucleotides, lipids n sugars under low nutrient conditions
What is the difference between microautophagy and macroautophagy?
- Microautophagy: direct targeting into a lysosome
- Chaperone-mediated autophagy: entry via a membrane channel
○ Hsc70 deliver certain subset of proteins directly thru the lysosome via channel
§ Protein is degraded inside lysosome - Macro autophagy: most well-characterized form
○ Phagophore captures cargo -> forms autophagosome (vesicle) -> fuses w late endosome, forming amphisome -> fuses w lyososome, forming autolysosme
- Chaperone-mediated autophagy: entry via a membrane channel
How to tell the difference b/w autophagosome n amphisome in microscopy?
○ Autophagosome: tubular element (ER), double membraned
○ Amphisome: vesicles
Describe anterograde traffic from the ER
- Number of destinations can be accessed by the transport network, including secreted vesicles that take products out to the cell surface or into early endosome system
- Early endosome (pH: 6.5) can access recycling compartment or from TGN can go directly into LE (pH 5.5)
Describe retrograde traffic from the cell surface
- Via endocytosis
- Primary destination is the early endosome
- Access the late endosome by acidification
Access TGN all the way back to the ER
Describe organelle fusion n regeneration
- To get to lysosome, you need lysosome late endosome fusion -> forms endolysosome
- How does a protein directed into the ER get into the lysosome?
○ ER associated expression of the protein
§ Folding, inactive
○ Transported to trans golgi Network, still inactive
○ Directed into LE, reduction in pH activates
○ Delivers to lysosome by fusion -> forms end lysosome
○ Endolysosome starts to tubulate
§ These tubules are removed to form lysosomes
- How does a protein directed into the ER get into the lysosome?
How is a low lysosomal pH maintained?
- Pumping V-type ATPases embedded into lysosomal membrane
- Hungry for ATP
- Convert energy from ATP hydrolysis into movement of hydrogen ions from oxides into lumen of the lysosome
- As H conc rises -> pH falls
- PROBLEM: can’t maintain system bc you’re continually driving hydrogen ions against conc gradient you set up
○ SOLUTION: counterion may be either a cation (positive) moving out of lysosome or anion (negative) moving into lysosome
○ Multiple ion channels that move Ca n Cl ions across the lysosomal membrane -> maintaining pH
Low pH is what activates lysosomal enzymes including proteases (e.g. nucleases, glycosidases, lipases, phospholipases, phosphates)
What is chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA)?
- Selective lysosomal degradation of proteins bearing Hsc70-binding KFERQ motifs via membrane channel formed from lysosome-associated membrane protein type 2A (LAMP 2A)
- LAMP proteins
○ One gene, 3 proteins w different TM n C termini [alternative splicing]
○ LAMP-2A: receptor n channel for CMA
○ LAMP-2B: required for fusion of autophagosomes w late endosomes/lysosomes
○ LAMP-2C: autophagy of nucleic acids - KFERQ has 2 positively charged residues (K,R)
○ 2 hydrophobic residues (I,F,LV)
○ Single negatively charged residue (E,D)
○ Single Q that can be either the N or C terminus
○ KFER can be in any order
- LAMP proteins
Describe the down regulation of CMA
- mTORC2 complex activates Akt1 by phosphorylation
- Activated Akt1 phosphorylates GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein)
- Phosphorylated GFAP inhibits CMA by keeping LAMP 2A inactive
RESULT: reduced substrate docking
What can stimulate mTORC2 activity n inhibit CMA?
- Nutrient rich diets
- High fat content
- Increasing age
Describe the up-regulation of CMA
- Inhibition of mTORC2 n Akt1 -> reduces phosphorylation of GFAP
- Non-phosphorylated GFAP stabilizes multimerizes LAMP 2A
- RESULT: increased substrate docking
- Small molecule inhibitors: potential pharmacological intervention
- CMA is responsive to
○ Withdrawal of GF
○ Starvation
○ Oxidative stress
○ DNA damage
○ Hypoxia
What are some CMA links w health n disease?
- Healthy cells
○ Reduces malignant transformation- Cancer cells
○ Degrades
§ Tumour supressors
§ Pro-apoptopic proteins
○ Protects against radiation n hypoxia
○ Favours growth n metastasis - Healthy individuals
○ α-SYN
○ PARK7
○ Tau - Neurodegenerative patients
○ CMA dysfunction
§ mRNA maturation
§ LAMP2 promoter variants
§ Tau accumulates
○ CMA toxicity
§ Mutants of α-SYN
§ PTM PARK7
§ Tau variants
- Cancer cells
Describe how micro autophagy occurs
- Autophagic cargoes are taken up by late endosomes n lysosomes
- Some micro autophagy substrates hv KFERQ motifs n are delivered by Hsc70 by direct binding of the chaperone to phosphatidylserine in the LE membrane
Autophagic cargos are then degraded in the end lysosomal or lysosomal lumen
- Some micro autophagy substrates hv KFERQ motifs n are delivered by Hsc70 by direct binding of the chaperone to phosphatidylserine in the LE membrane
What is microautophagy, and how does it differ from chaperone-mediated autophagy?
How are autophagosomes formed?
- Initiation
- Nucleation
- Growth
Closure