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Keywords: Aggrephagy
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Articles
Journal:
Essays in Biochemistry
Essays Biochem (2017) 61 (6): 609–624.
Published: 12 December 2017
... of the Biochemical Society 2017 Aggrephagy Lysophagy Mitophagy p62/SQSTM1 Selective autophagy Xenophagy Autophagy encompasses three main pathways that mediate lysosomal degradation of intracellular cargoes. These are macroautophagy, microautophagy, and chaperone-mediated autophagy...
Abstract
In selective autophagy, cytoplasmic components are selected and tagged before being sequestered into an autophagosome by means of selective autophagy receptors such as p62/SQSTM1. In this review, we discuss how selective autophagy is regulated. An important level of regulation is the selection of proteins or organelles for degradation. Components selected for degradation are tagged, often with ubiquitin, to facilitate recognition by autophagy receptors. Another level of regulation is represented by the autophagy receptors themselves. For p62, its ability to co-aggregate with ubiquitinated substrates is strongly induced by post-translational modifications (PTMs). The transcription of p62 is also markedly increased during conditions in which selective autophagy substrates accumulate. For other autophagy receptors, the LC3-interacting region (LIR) motif is regulated by PTMs, inhibiting or stimulating the interaction with ATG8 family proteins. ATG8 proteins are also regulated by PTMs. Regulation of the capacity of the core autophagy machinery also affects selective autophagy. Importantly, autophagy receptors can induce local recruitment and activation of ULK1/2 and PI3KC3 complexes at the site of cargo sequestration.
Articles
Journal:
Essays in Biochemistry
Essays Biochem (2013) 55: 79–92.
Published: 27 September 2013
... protein aggregates (aggrephagy). 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed (email terje.johansen@uit.no ). © The Authors Journal compilation © 2013 Biochemical Society 2013 aggrephagy NBR1 NDP52 optineurin p62 selective autophagy TBK1 ubiquitin xenophagy Eukaryotic...
Abstract
During the last decade it has become evident that autophagy is not simply a non-selective bulk degradation pathway for intracellular components. On the contrary, the discovery and characterization of autophagy receptors which target specific cargo for lysosomal degradation by interaction with ATG8 (autophagy-related protein 8)/LC3 (light-chain 3) has accelerated our understanding of selective autophagy. A number of autophagy receptors have been identified which specifically mediate the selective autophagosomal degradation of a variety of cargoes including protein aggregates, signalling complexes, midbody rings, mitochondria and bacterial pathogens. In the present chapter, we discuss these autophagy receptors, their binding to ATG8/LC3 proteins and how they act in ubiquitin-mediated selective autophagy of intracellular bacteria (xenophagy) and protein aggregates (aggrephagy).