| Literature DB >> 30814064 |
Emily J Jones1,2,3, Zoe J Matthews3, Lejla Gul1, Padhmanand Sudhakar1,2, Agatha Treveil1,2, Devina Divekar2,3, Jasmine Buck3, Tomasz Wrzesinski1, Matthew Jefferson3, Stuart D Armstrong4, Lindsay J Hall2, Alastair J M Watson2,3, Simon R Carding2,3, Wilfried Haerty1, Federica Di Palma1, Ulrike Mayer5, Penny P Powell3, Isabelle Hautefort1, Tom Wileman2,3, Tamas Korcsmaros6,2.
Abstract
Paneth cells are key epithelial cells that provide an antimicrobial barrier and maintain integrity of the small-intestinal stem cell niche. Paneth cell abnormalities are unfortunately detrimental to gut health and are often associated with digestive pathologies such as Crohn's disease or infections. Similar alterations are observed in individuals with impaired autophagy, a process that recycles cellular components. The direct effect of autophagy impairment on Paneth cells has not been analysed. To investigate this, we generated a mouse model lacking Atg16l1 specifically in intestinal epithelial cells, making these cells impaired in autophagy. Using three-dimensional intestinal organoids enriched for Paneth cells, we compared the proteomic profiles of wild-type and autophagy-impaired organoids. We used an integrated computational approach combining protein-protein interaction networks, autophagy-targeted proteins and functional information to identify the mechanistic link between autophagy impairment and disrupted pathways. Of the 284 altered proteins, 198 (70%) were more abundant in autophagy-impaired organoids, suggesting reduced protein degradation. Interestingly, these differentially abundant proteins comprised 116 proteins (41%) that are predicted targets of the selective autophagy proteins p62, LC3 and ATG16L1. Our integrative analysis revealed autophagy-mediated mechanisms that degrade key proteins in Paneth cell functions, such as exocytosis, apoptosis and DNA damage repair. Transcriptomic profiling of additional organoids confirmed that 90% of the observed changes upon autophagy alteration have effects at the protein level, not on gene expression. We performed further validation experiments showing differential lysozyme secretion, confirming our computationally inferred downregulation of exocytosis. Our observations could explain how protein-level alterations affect Paneth cell homeostatic functions upon autophagy impairment.This article has an associated First Person interview with the joint first authors of the paper.Entities:
Keywords: Atg16l1; Intestinal organoids; Paneth cells; Quantitative proteomics; Selective autophagy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30814064 PMCID: PMC6451430 DOI: 10.1242/dmm.037069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Model Mech ISSN: 1754-8403 Impact factor: 5.758
Fig. 1.A schematic representation of the workflow to determine the functional effects of autophagy impairment in Three biological replicates were generated for each condition and genotype tested, and for both the proteomic and transcriptomic type of profiling.
Fig. 2.(A) Brightfield image of control (WT) and Atg16l1ΔIEC (KO) organoids after 7 days of growth. Magnification: 10×; scale bars: 100 µm. (B) Cell-type-specific RT-PCR amplification of cDNAs in WT and Atg16l1ΔIEC (KO) organoids. β-actin was used as a housekeeping gene. (C) Western blots using anti-ATG16L1 and -LC3 antibodies detected Atg16l1 and LC3II in control organoids but Atg16l1ΔIEC (KO) organoids were deficient in Atg16l1 and LC3II.
Fig. 3.Percentage of higher- and lower-abundance proteins in different cellular functions. Proteins with higher abundance are marked with orange and lower-abundance proteins with a blue background. The ‘Other’ category contains all of the proteins that did not fit into other functional groups.
Effect of the
Fig. 4.Overlap between the proteins with altered abundances in Paneth cell organoids. The diagram is restricted to proteins potentially targeted by each of the three selective autophagy-mediating proteins – p62, LC3 and Atg16l1 – under normal circumstances without any defects in autophagy.
Fig. 5.Potential autophagy dependency of the altered functional processes inferred from the proteomic profile of the The autophagy dependency of the proteins with altered abundances (orange ellipsoids for proteins with increased abundance; blue ellipsoids for proteins with decreased abundance) are represented, highlighting the effect of proteins in the processes (purple line for activation and green line for inhibition) as well. The aggregated trends of the altered functional processes as determined by the integrative approach (see Materials and Methods section) are indicated (yellow rectangles for upregulated functional processes; red rectangles for functional processes; white rectangles for functional processes that are both up- and downregulated). Proteins outside the circle are grouped to the process that they are involved in to increase the clarity of the figure. The figure was created using Cytoscape.
Fig. 6.Atg16l11 deficiency in Paneth cell organoids and its impact on exocytotic proteins ( (A) Proteins belonging to the functional category of exocytosis with lower abundance, reflecting the impact of autophagy impairment on Paneth cell functions such as granule processing and release through exocytosis. (B) Western blot analysis for Paneth-cell-derived lysozyme on cellular extracts from WT or Atg16l11▵IEC organoids expressing a similar level of CD24 (Fig. 2B). **P≤0.01. (C) Lysozyme activity measured in culture medium of 2D WT and Atg16l11▵IEC organoids as reporter of Paneth cell exocytosis. (D) Activators or inhibitors of exocytosis-related proteins found to be differentially abundant upon autophagy impairment. Blue and orange bars correspond to proteins with decreased and increased abundances, respectively. Overall, these changes support the observed reduction of exocytosis.
The aggregated trends of the functional categories that correspond both to the proteins with altered abundances and are potentially targeted by selective autophagy in response to the