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A Vps21 endocytic module regulates autophagy.

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posted on 2016-01-15, 00:00 authored by Y. Chen, F. Zhou, S. Zou, S. Yu, S. Li, D. Li, J. Song, H. Li, Z. He, B. Hu, L.O. Björn, Z. Lipatova, Y. Liang, Z. Xie, N. Segev
In autophagy, the double-membrane autophagosome delivers cellular components for their degradation in the lysosome. The conserved Ypt/Rab GTPases regulate all cellular trafficking pathways, including autophagy. These GTPases function in modules that include guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) activators and downstream effectors. Rab7 and its yeast homologue, Ypt7, in the context of such a module, regulate the fusion of both late endosomes and autophagosomes with the lysosome. In yeast, the Rab5-related Vps21 is known for its role in early- to late-endosome transport. Here we show an additional role for Vps21 in autophagy. First, vps21∆ mutant cells are defective in selective and nonselective autophagy. Second, fluorescence and electron microscopy analyses show that vps21∆ mutant cells accumulate clusters of autophagosomal structures outside the vacuole. Third, cells with mutations in other members of the endocytic Vps21 module, including the GEF Vps9 and factors that function downstream of Vps21, Vac1, CORVET, Pep12, and Vps45, are also defective in autophagy and accumulate clusters of autophagosomes. Finally, Vps21 localizes to PAS. We propose that the endocytic Vps21 module also regulates autophagy. These findings support the idea that the two pathways leading to the lysosome--endocytosis and autophagy--converge through the Vps21 and Ypt7 GTPase modules. © 2014 Chen et al. This article is distributed by The American Society for Cell Biology under license from the author(s). Two months after publication it is available to the public under an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0).

Funding

We thank PerkinElmer Instruments (Shanghai, China) for financial and technical support in time-lapse microscopy. This work was supported by grants from the Natural Science Foundation of China (31271520 to Y.L., 31301173 to S.Z., 31222034 and 31171285 to Z.X., and 31070242 to SL); Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (KYZ201215 to Y.L.; Y0201300236 to S.Z.); the Project sponsored by the Scientific Research Foundation for the Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars, State Education Ministry (2011/508 to Y.L.); Nanjing Agricultural University (680- 804094-521 to Y.L.); the Ministry of Education in China (NCET-12- 0283 to Z.X.); the National Key Basic Research Program of China (2011CB910100 to Z.X.); and the National Institutes of Health (GM-45444 to N.S.). Y.C. was supported by the Program for Scientific Innovation Research of College Graduate in Jiangsu Province (CXLX12_0267).

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Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Molecular Biology of the Cell © 2014 American Society for Cell Biology Publications. © 2014 Chen et al.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology

issn

1059-1524

Issue date

2014-10-15

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