Lipid trafficking by yeast Snx4 family SNX-BAR proteins promotes autophagy and vacuole membrane fusion

Autor(en): Ma, Mengxiao
Kumar, Santosh
Purushothaman, Latha
Babst, Markus
Ungermann, Christian 
Chi, Richard J.
Burd, Christopher G.
Stichwörter: CARGO; Cell Biology; CYTOPLASM; EARLY STEPS; MAPPING REVEALS; MITOCHONDRIA; PATHWAYS; PHOSPHATIDYLETHANOLAMINE; PHOSPHATIDYLSERINE; SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE; TRANSPORT
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Herausgeber: AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
Journal: MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volumen: 29
Ausgabe: 18
Startseite: 2190
Seitenende: 2200
Zusammenfassung: 
Cargo-selective and nonselective autophagy pathways employ a common core autophagy machinery that directs biogenesis of an autophagosome that eventually fuses with the lysosome to mediate turnover of macromolecules. In yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells, several selective autophagy pathways fail in cells lacking the dimeric Snx4/Atg24 and Atg20/Snx42 sorting nexins containing a BAR domain (SNX-BARs), which function as coat proteins of endosome-derived retrograde transport carriers. It is unclear whether endosomal sorting by Snx4 proteins contributes to autophagy. Cells lacking Snx4 display a deficiency in starvation induced, nonselective autophagy that is severely exacerbated by ablation of mitochondrial phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis. Under these conditions, phosphatidylserine accumulates in the membranes of the endosome and vacuole, autophagy intermediates accumulate within the cytoplasm, and homotypic vacuole fusion is impaired. The Snx4-Atg20 dimer displays preference for binding and remodeling of phosphatidylserine-containing membrane in vitro, suggesting that Snx4-Atg20-coated carriers export phosphatidylserinerich membrane from the endosome. Autophagy and vacuole fusion are restored by increasing phosphatidylethanolamine biosynthesis via alternative pathways, indicating that retrograde sorting by the Snx4 family sorting nexins maintains glycerophospholipid homeostasis required for autophagy and fusion competence of the vacuole membrane.
ISSN: 10591524
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E17-12-0743

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