Non-canonical autophagy drives alternative ATG8 conjugation to phosphatidylserine

  • Durgan, Joanne
  • Lystad, Alf H.
  • Sloan, Katherine
  • Carlsson, Sven R.
  • Wilson, Michael I.
  • Marcassa, Elena
  • Ulferts, Rachel
  • Webster, Judith
  • Lopez-Clavijo, Andrea F.
  • Wakelam, Michael J.
  • Beale, Rupert
  • Simonsen, Anne
  • Oxley, David
  • Florey, Oliver
Publication date
January 2021
Publisher
Elsevier BV

Abstract

Autophagy is a fundamental catabolic process that uses a unique post-translational modification, the conjugation of ATG8 protein to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). ATG8 lipidation also occurs during non-canonical autophagy, a parallel pathway involving conjugation of ATG8 to single membranes (CASM) at endolysosomal compartments, with key functions in immunity, vision, and neurobiology. It is widely assumed that CASM involves the same conjugation of ATG8 to PE, but this has not been formally tested. Here, we discover that all ATG8s can also undergo alternative lipidation to phosphatidylserine (PS) during CASM, induced pharmacologically, by LC3-associated phagocytosis or influenza A virus infection, in mammalian cells. Importantly, ATG8-PS and...

Extracted data

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