| Literature DB >> 28877469 |
Jonathan M Goodwin1, William E Dowdle1, Rowena DeJesus1, Zuncai Wang1, Philip Bergman1, Marek Kobylarz1, Alicia Lindeman1, Ramnik J Xavier2, Gregory McAllister1, Beat Nyfeler3, Gregory Hoffman4, Leon O Murphy5.
Abstract
Iron is vital for many homeostatic processes, and its liberation from ferritin nanocages occurs in the lysosome. Studies indicate that ferritin and its binding partner nuclear receptor coactivator-4 (NCOA4) are targeted to lysosomes by a form of selective autophagy. By using genome-scale functional screening, we identify an alternative lysosomal transport pathway for ferritin that requires FIP200, ATG9A, VPS34, and TAX1BP1 but lacks involvement of the ATG8 lipidation machinery that constitutes classical macroautophagy. TAX1BP1 binds directly to NCOA4 and is required for lysosomal trafficking of ferritin under basal and iron-depleted conditions. Under basal conditions ULK1/2-FIP200 controls ferritin turnover, but its deletion leads to TAX1BP1-dependent activation of TBK1 that regulates redistribution of ATG9A to the Golgi enabling continued trafficking of ferritin. Cells expressing an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-associated TBK1 allele are incapable of degrading ferritin suggesting a molecular mechanism that explains the presence of iron deposits in patient brain biopsies.Entities:
Keywords: ALS; ATG9A; NCOA4; TAX1BP1; TBK1; ULK1/2; autophagy; ferritinophagy; pooled CRISPR screen; trafficking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28877469 PMCID: PMC5699710 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.08.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423