Lecture 5 - Exam 4: Autophagy and Endocytosis Flashcards

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1
Q

Organization of the Lysosome:
For the lysosome to maintain the acidic pH, what has to happen?
What does this require?

A

A proton pump in the lysosomal membrane actively transports protons into the lysosome.
Thus, pumping requires expenditure of energy in the form of ATP.

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2
Q

How much higher is the H+ concentration inside the lysosome than in the cytosol?

A

Hundredfold higher.

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3
Q

Most lysosomal enzymes are…?

A

Acid hydrolases

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4
Q

How are lysosomes formed?

A

Through a maturation process: Endosomal maturation.

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5
Q

During endosomal maturation, what decreases?

A

pH

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6
Q

What happens during endosomal maturation?

A

The early endosomes undergo a maturation process that ultimately results in the formation of the endolysosome, a temporary hybrid organelle resulting from fusion with lysosomes.

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7
Q

What are early endosomes (EE)?

A

-Recognized as the main sorting station in the endocytic pathway.
-Close to the cell membrane (energetically favorable).
-Heterogenous structure: relatively small.
-Rab5 that defines the early endosome, involved in “uncoating” and fusion.
-Weakly acidic - pH 5.9-6.8 (overall goal digestion, first step).

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8
Q

What are late endosomes (LE)?

A

-More circular but varies in size (no restriction).
-Multivesicular bodies (from multiple early endosomes fusing together).
-Rab7 identifies LE membranes.
-Slightly acidic pH 4.6-6.0 (more acidic as we get closer to lysosome)

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9
Q

What are endolysosomes?

A

Fusion compartment between the late endosome and the lysosome.
-It is the site of hydrolysis of most endocytic cargo.

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10
Q

Why are LEs subject to such a dramatic transformation?

A

-Exchange of membrane components (compartment conversion)
-Exchange of Rab proteins
-Movement to the perinuclear area
-A decrease in luminal pH
-Addition of LYSOSOMAL components

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11
Q

Describe acidification during maturation of late endosomes (LE).

A

-Vacuolar-type H+ ATPase (V-ATPase).
-Active transport of ATP
-Hydrogen ions passing through the channel complex drop the pH inside the compartment as it matures. During maturation the number of pumps increases.

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12
Q

What is the lysosomal storage disease?

A

Gaucher Disease

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13
Q

What is Gaucher disease?

A

-The most common of the lysosomal storage diseases.
-Caused by deficiency of glucocerebrosidase, which catalyzes hydrolysis of glucosylceramide to glucose and ceramide.

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14
Q

What are the symptoms of Gaucher Disease?

A

Impaired olfaction and cognition.
-Bone abnormalities.
-Rapid and premature destruction of blood cells, leads to anemia.

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15
Q

How are autophagosomes formed?

A

Regions of the cytoplasm or internal organelles (such as mitochondria) are enclosed by membranes derived from the endoplasmic reticulum, forming autophagosomes.

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16
Q

What forms large phagolysosomes?

A

Autophagosomes fuse with lysosomes to form large phagolysosomes in which their contents are digested.