| Literature DB >> 26512956 |
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26512956 PMCID: PMC4632325 DOI: 10.1038/cddis.2015.311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Figure 1Autophagy dysfunction in mutant FUS-linked ALS (a) Initiation of autophagy occurs at the ER. Firstly, an omegasome is formed from the ER membrane. The omegasome is characterised by the presence of DFCP1, which is mobilized from the Golgi apparatus. The isolation membrane then forms the omegasome. Additional membrane obtained from Golgi vesicles, containing membrane associated proteins ATG9, TRAPP as well as Rab1, is added to the isolation membrane to form the double layered autophagosome. LC3, a widely used autophagosome marker, is then recruited to the autophagosome membrane. Autophagic receptors p62 and NBR1, which both bind to ubiquitinated proteins and target ubiquitinated protein to autophagosomes, are also recruited to the autophagosome membrane. The autophagosome then fuses with the lysosome to form the autolysosome. In cells expressing mutant FUS, mutant FUS inhibits the formation of the autophagosome, omegasome, and autolysosome. (b) In fALS patients, (1) although autophagosomes do not form as readily in mutant FUS expressing cells, over the course of human disease, eventually functional autophagy is inhibited, leading to the accumulation of autophagosomes (dashed arrow). (2) The lack of autolysosomes may lead to an increase the number of autophagosomes in human patient motor neurons. (3) Another possibility is that the increase in LC3 vesicles in fALS patient motor neurons is due to induction of the non-canonical autophagy pathway (red dotted arrow). mFUS, mutant FUS