| Literature DB >> 19730746 |
Géraldine Mitou1, Hikmet Budak, Devrim Gozuacik.
Abstract
Autophagy (or self eating), a cellular recycling mechanism, became the center of interest and subject of intensive research in recent years. Development of new molecular techniques allowed the study of this biological phenomenon in various model organisms ranging from yeast to plants and mammals. Accumulating data provide evidence that autophagy is involved in a spectrum of biological mechanisms including plant growth, development, response to stress, and defense against pathogens. In this review, we briefly summarize general and plant-related autophagy studies, and explain techniques commonly used to study autophagy. We also try to extrapolate how autophagy techniques used in other organisms may be adapted to plant studies.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19730746 PMCID: PMC2734941 DOI: 10.1155/2009/451357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Plant Genomics ISSN: 1687-5389
Figure 1Autophagy mechanism and alternative pathways for autophagosomes in plants. (a) Following an upstream stimulus, such as starvation, double membrane vesicles, autophagosomes, appear and engulf portions of cytosol, long-lived proteins, and organelles such as mitochondria. Autophagosomes eventually fuse with lysosomes, endosomes, or vacuole. Autophagosomes are degraded together with their cargo and the building blocks are pumped back into the cytosol for reuse. (b) Autophagosomes may fuse directly with the vacuole (observed in A. thaliana) (c) or, may first fuse with “lysosome-like structure” or endosomes to form “autolysosome-like structures” and then, eventually may fuse with the vacuole (observed in tobacco plant).
Phenotypes caused by ATG gene modifications in Arabidopsis thaliana. E64d, inhibitor of lysosomal/vacuolar hydrolases; Concanamycin A, inhibitor of vacuolar (V-type) ATPase, preventing lysosomal/vacuolar degradation:HR-PCD (hypersensitive response programmed cell death).
| Genotype | Phenotype | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Atg2-deficient | No autophagic inclusions in root tips upon E64d treatment. | [ |
| Atg4a-/ Atg4b-deficient | Upon nitrogen starvation, no autophagosome formation and no delivery of GFP-Atg8 to the vacuole. | [ |
| Atg5-deficient | Inhibition of rubisco containing body formation. | [ |
| No autophagic vesicles in root tips after E64d treatment. | [ | |
| No formation of Atg5/12 complex. Defective in autophagy induced by concanamycin A treatment. | [ | |
| Senescence upon light and carbon or nitrogen limitation. | [ | |
| Atg6-deficient | Male sterility. | [ |
| HR-PCD sensitive. Early senescence. | [ | |
| Developmental defects and impaired pollen germination. | [ | |
| Atg7-deficient | Hypersensitive to nutrient-limitation. Senescence. | [ |
| Atg8-transgenic | Expression induced by starvation. Stress leads premature aging. | [ |
| Atg9-deficient | Under carbon and nitrogen starvation, accelerated chlorosis. | [ |
| Seed germination impaired and leaf senescence accelerated. | ||
| Weak decrease of autophagic vesicle accumulation following E64d treatment. | [ | |
| Atg10-deficient | Hypersensitive to nitrogen and carbon starvation. Early senescence and PCD. | [ |
| No formation of Atg5/12 complex. Defective in autophagy induced by concanamycin A treatment. | [ | |
| Atg18a-transgenic | Hypersensitivity to sucrose and nitrogen starvation. Premature senescence. | [ |
Figure 2GFP-Atg8/LC3 dot accumulation and TEM method to detect autophagic activity. (a) LC3 dot formation upon starvation in fibroblasts isolated from GFP-Atg8/LC3 transgenic mice. The green dots are autophagic vesicles labelled by GFP-Atg8/LC3. (b) Transmission electron microscopic picture of an autophagic vesicle (arrow) in kidney of tunicamycin injected mouse. Note that in addition to cytoplasmic material, a mitochondrium (arrowhead) is also engulfed inside the double membrane vesicle.
Advantages and disadvantages of techniques used to study autophagy.
| Technique | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Electron microscopy | Golden standard.Morphological characterization of autophagosomes, autolysosomes and their cargo. | Equipment and expertise required.Difficult to make quantitative analyses. |
| Atg8/LC3 conjugation to lipid | Rapid detection and quantification of autophagy.Amenable to high throughput techniques.Used to create transgenic organisms for in vivo study of autophagy. | Dots do not always reflect autophagic activity.Molecular weight shift tests need careful interpretation. |
| Other molecular markers (Atg5, Atg6, Atg16 and Atg18 detection) | Detection of various stages of autophagic vesicle formation. | Most of them need further evaluation. |
| PI3P detection | Reflects the activity of Vps34 kinase.Quantitative analysis possible. | PI3P accumulation in phenomena not directly related to autophagy (vesicular transport). |
| Atg1 and Atg4 activity | Determination of enzymatic activity. | So far no clear kinetic studies were published. |
| P62/SQSTM1 degradation | Activated especially by protein aggregates. | Not all stimuli activate its degradation.Orthologue in plants? |
| Lysotracker and acridine orange staining | Determination and quantification of autophagy-related lytic activity (lysosomal/vacuolar).FACscan analysis possible. | Autophagosomes are not detected.Lytic activity induced by other conditions as well. |
| MDC staining | Determination and quantification of autophagy-related lytic activity (lysosomal/vacuolar). | Not all autophagosomes are detected.Lytic activity induced by other conditions as well. |
| Long-lived protein degradation | Measures autophagic degradation of proteins.Kinetic measurements possible. | Nonspecific degradation of proteins by mechanisms other than autophagy. Radioactive technique. |
| Sequestration of sugars | Measures autophagic sequestration phase.Quantification may be possible. | Sugars may be metabolized. |
| Phosphorylcholine accumulation | Promising plant autophagy technique.Quantification may be possible. | Quantification requires special equipment (NMR spectroscopy). |
| Nonselective and selective degradation of proteins | Promising techniques for plant autophagy.Detection of both sequestration and degradation phases.Quantification may be possible. | Autophagy target proteins need further characterization. |
| Test of mitophagy or chloroplast autophagy | Detection of autophagy target organelle degradation.Various organelle-specific proteins or organelle-tagged may be used. | Quantification not always possible. |