| Literature DB >> 32486891 |
Thawfeek Mohamed Varusai1,2, Steven Jupe3, Cristoffer Sevilla1, Lisa Matthews4, Marc Gillespie5,6, Lincoln Stein5,7, Guanming Wu8, Peter D'Eustachio4, Emmanouil Metzakopian9, Henning Hermjakob1,10.
Abstract
The 21st century has revealed much about the fundamental cellular process of autophagy. Autophagy controls the catabolism and recycling of various cellular components both as a constitutive process and as a response to stress and foreign material invasion. There is considerable knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of autophagy, and this is still growing as new modalities emerge. There is a need to investigate autophagy mechanisms reliably, comprehensively and conveniently. Reactome is a freely available knowledgebase that consists of manually curated molecular events (reactions) organized into cellular pathways (https://reactome.org/). Pathways/reactions in Reactome are hierarchically structured, graphically presented and extensively annotated. Data analysis tools, such as pathway enrichment, expression data overlay and species comparison, are also available. For customized analysis, information can also be programmatically queried. Here, we discuss the curation and annotation of the molecular mechanisms of autophagy in Reactome. We also demonstrate the value that Reactome adds to research by reanalyzing a previously published work on genome-wide CRISPR screening of autophagy components.Abbreviations: CMA: chaperone-mediated autophagy; GO: Gene Ontology; MA: macroautophagy; MI: microautophagy; MTOR: mechanistic target of rapamycin kinase; SQSTM1: sequestosome 1.Entities:
Keywords: Annotation; Reactome; autophagy; biocuration; curation; enrichment analysis; knowledgebase; mechanistic analysis; molecular reactions; pathways
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32486891 PMCID: PMC8204961 DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2020.1761659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autophagy ISSN: 1554-8627 Impact factor: 16.016
Figure 1.Evolving autophagy knowledge in Reactome. (A) Growing number of components, reactions and literature references curated in the autophagy pathway in different Reactome release versions (modifications of the pathway hierarchy in each release are shown in the right panel). (B) Increased interaction of autophagy components with other pathways with the inclusion of new knowledge
Comparison between Gene Ontology and Reactome
| Gene Ontology (GO) | Reactome | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Curated information | Category | Curated information |
| Gene product | Biochemical activity | Gene product | Consumed in reaction |
| Reaction | Nature of reaction* | ||
| | | Pathway | Reactions contained |
| Category | Annotations | Category | Annotations |
| Gene product | Associated with other gene products with suitable GO terms | Gene product | Associated with reactions (input/output/catalyst/regulator) |
| Reaction | Associated with other reactions (preceding/following reactions) | ||
| | | Pathway | Associated with other pathways (parent/other pathways)** |
| Category | Annotation model | Category | Annotation model |
| Gene product | Manual annotation from scientific literature combined with | Gene product | Manual annotation from scientific literature (humans)*** |
*The three main reaction types in Reactome are binding, transformation (post-translational modifications, translocations, etc) and dissociation.
**Sub-pathways/reactions in Reactome can be shared by different pathways allowing the capture of crosstalk information.
***Pathways/reactions for non-human species are electronically predicted based on orthology analysis.
Figure 2.Representation of autophagy pathway in Reactome (A) Systematic organization of sub-pathways and reactions (B) Overview of the pathway designed as fireworks-styled and Voronoi diagrams (C) Textbook-styled diagram of the process (D) Detailed molecular reactions presented in SBGN format
Classification tree similarity of autophagy process between Reactome and GO
| Reactome hierarchy | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Autophagy | MA | Selective autophagy | Mitophagy |
| Lipophagy | |||
| Aggrephagy (R-HSA-9646399) | |||
| CMA (R-HSA-9613829) | |||
| Late endosomal MI (R-HSA-9615710) | |||
| GO hierarchy [ | |||
| Autophagy (GO:0006914) | MA (GO:0016236) | Selective autophagy | Lipophagy |
| Aggrephagy(GO:0035973) | |||
| CMA (GO:0061684) | |||
| Late endosomal MI (GO:0061738) | |||
| Mitophagy (GO:0000422) | |||
Manually curated and annotated reactions in autophagy in Reactome version 71
| Gene Ontology annotations | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pathways | Total entities* | Total reactions | Cellular components | Molecular functions | Biological processes | Total literature references |
| Macroauto-phagy | 79 | 39 | Cytosol/endosome/lysosome/endoplasmic reticulum/phagophore/autophagosome | kinase/GTPase/phosphatase/transferase/endopeptidase/ligase | Macro- autophagy | 35 |
| Chaperone-mediated autophagy | 27 | 19 | Cytosol/lysosome | - | Chaperone mediated autophagy | 16 |
| Late endosomal microauto- phagy | 5 | 3 | Cytosol/endosome | - | Late endosomal microauto- phagy | 5 |
| Mitophagy | 45 | 15 | Cytosol/mitochondria | Transporter/transferase/kinase/phosphatase | Mitophagy | 17 |
| Lipophagy | 9 | 5 | Cytosol/lipid droplet | - | Lipophagy | 5 |
| Aggrephagy | 26 | 15 | Cytosol/microtubule | - | Aggrephagy | 12 |
*entities include proteins, chemicals, complexes and polymers.
Figure 3.Autophagy interaction with other Reactome pathways based on shared proteins. This figure was generated by running a Reactome pathway analysis with the 127 proteins from the “Autophagy” top-level pathway and its child nodes. (A) Enrichment of autophagy proteins in Reactome pathways (B) Clustered heatmap of autophagy proteins present in other pathways (first level children)
Figure 4.Reactome enrichment analysis of top 100 genes from GFP low vs. GFP high (autophagy activation) data from [21] (A) Distribution of 100 genes across Reactome pathway – yellow indicates matched entities and gradient represents significance (p-value) (B) Overlap of CRISPR-knocked out genes on the macroautophagy pathway (C) Macroautophagy inhibitory mechanisms – MTOR phosphorylation of ULK1 is significantly matched (D) Macroautophagy inhibitory mechanisms – AMBRA1 sequestering BECN1 complex is significantly matched
Enriched pathways for top 100 SQSTM1-modulating genes
| Top 100 genes (Low vs High: SQSTM1 degradation) | Top 100 genes (High vs Low: SQSTM1 accumulation) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| DeJesus R et al. analysis [ | Reactome analysis (Curated pathway) | DeJesus R et al. analysis [ | Reactome analysis (Curated pathway) |
| transcription initiation from | autophagy | autophagosome assembly | autophagy |
| gene expression | macroautophagy | macroautophagy | macroautophagy |
| EPH/ephrin receptor signaling pathway | CD28 co-stimulation | mitophagy | nonsense-mediated decay |
| macroautophagy | PPARA activates gene expression | nucleophagy | nonsense-mediated decay enhanced by the exon junction complex |
| regulation of transcription from | Regulation of lipid metabolism by PPARA/PPARalpha | cellular response to nitrogen starvation | receptor mediated mitophagy |
Genes not found in Reactome enrichment analysis using top 100 SQSTM1-modulating genes
| Top 100 genes (Low vs High: SQSTM1 degradation) | Top 100 genes (High vs Low: SQSTM1 accumulation) |
|---|---|
Figure 5.Reactome querying using Cypher and Neo4j (A) Extracting the reactions/pathways involving MTOR protein (B) Retrieving cellular compartments involved in macroautophagy (C) Obtaining a human-readable summary on ULK1 phosphorylation by MTORC1