| Literature DB >> 30885034 |
Damián Gatica1, Guowu Hu2, Nannan Zhang2, Peter R Williamson2, Daniel J Klionsky1.
Abstract
Deregulation of macroautophagy/autophagy, a conserved catabolic recycling pathway, has been implicated in the onset and development of several diseases. While post-translational regulation of auto-phagy-related (Atg) proteins has been an important research focus leading to significant breakthroughs in understanding autophagy regulation, less is known about the post-transcriptional regulation of ATG transcripts. In a recent study we showed that, during nitrogen starvation, the RNA-binding complex Pat1-Lsm is involved in binding and preventing the 3' to 5' exosome-mediated degradation of a specific subset of ATG mRNAs. Dephosphorylation of Pat1 at residues S456 and S457 facilitates ATG mRNA binding, resulting in ATG mRNA accumulation, Atg protein synthesis and robust autophagy induction. In addition, we present evidence that these processes are conserved in human cells. These results further elucidate our understanding of the post-transcriptional mechanism necessary for efficient induction of autophagy during stress conditions.Entities:
Keywords: 3ʹ-5ʹ degradation; 5ʹ-3ʹ degradation; Lsm1; Xrn1; exosome; mRNA decay
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30885034 PMCID: PMC6526820 DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2019.1587262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autophagy ISSN: 1554-8627 Impact factor: 16.016