| Literature DB >> 33391472 |
Wen Li1,2,3, Pengcheng He4,5, Yuge Huang3, Yi-Fang Li2, Jiahong Lu6, Min Li7, Hiroshi Kurihara2, Zhuo Luo2, Tian Meng1,8, Mashun Onishi9, Changle Ma10, Lei Jiang5, Yongquan Hu1,8, Qing Gong11, Dongxing Zhu12, Yiming Xu13, Rong Liu14,15, Lei Liu16, Cong Yi17, Yushan Zhu18, Ningfang Ma1,8, Koji Okamoto9, Zhiping Xie19, Jinbao Liu1, Rong-Rong He2, Du Feng1,8.
Abstract
Macroautophagy (hereafter called autophagy) is a highly conserved physiological process that degrades over-abundant or damaged organelles, large protein aggregates and invading pathogens via the lysosomal system (the vacuole in plants and yeast). Autophagy is generally induced by stress, such as oxygen-, energy- or amino acid-deprivation, irradiation, drugs, etc. In addition to non-selective bulk degradation, autophagy also occurs in a selective manner, recycling specific organelles, such as mitochondria, peroxisomes, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), lysosomes, nuclei, proteasomes and lipid droplets (LDs). This capability makes selective autophagy a major process in maintaining cellular homeostasis. The dysfunction of selective autophagy is implicated in neurodegenerative diseases (NDDs), tumorigenesis, metabolic disorders, heart failure, etc. Considering the importance of selective autophagy in cell biology, we systemically review the recent advances in our understanding of this process and its regulatory mechanisms. We emphasize the 'cargo-ligand-receptor' model in selective autophagy for specific organelles or cellular components in yeast and mammals, with a focus on mitophagy and ER-phagy, which are finely described as types of selective autophagy. Additionally, we highlight unanswered questions in the field, helping readers focus on the research blind spots that need to be broken. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: ER-phagy; autophagy receptor; lipophagy; lysophagy; mitophagy; nucleophagy; pexophagy; proteaphagy; ribophagy; selective autophagy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33391472 PMCID: PMC7681076 DOI: 10.7150/thno.49860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Figure 2Proposed models for different mammalian mitophagy pathways. The diagram shows two classical mitophagy pathways: (1) mitophagy receptors/adapters-mediated mitophagy and (2) PINK1/Parkin-induced mitophagy. (1) Under hypoxic conditions, FUNDC1, BNIP3 and NIX recruits autophagosomes to mitochondria by direct interaction with LC3 through its LIR domains. Upon mitophagy induction, Ambra1 mediates HUWE1 translocation from cytosol to mitochondria, leading to the degradation of MFN2. This event is necessary for Ambra1-induced mitophagy. Additionally, the phosphorylation status of S1014 on Ambra1 by IKKα kinase enables the interaction between Ambra1 and LC3 during mitophagy. PHB2 is a newly identified inner mitochondrial protein that is crucial for targeting mitochondria for autophagic degradation. Externalization of CL to the OMM in response to mitochondrial damage serves as a recognition signal for selective autophagic clearance of dysfunctional mitochondria. CL interacts with LC3 and functions as a mitophagy receptor in cortical neurons of mammals. Ceramide has been identified as a selective receptor for mitophagy by binding directly to LC3. FKBP8, an OMM protein, is a novel mitophagy receptor, inducing the degradation of damaged mitochondria via the interaction with LC3. NDP52 and OPTN function as the bridge connecting UPS and autophagy, since they can bind both ubiquitin and LC3/GABARAP. NBR1, a functional homolog of P62, is dispensable for Parkin-mediated mitophagy regardless of the presence or absence of P62. TBK1-mediated phosphorylation promotes the recruitment of OPTN, NDP52, and P62 to depolarized mitochondria. (2) According to PINK1/Parkin-induced mitophagy, mitochondrial stress leads to mitochondrial damage, which is followed by PINK1-mediated translocation of Parkin from the cytosol to depolarized mitochondrion. Parkin then ubiquitinates outer mitochondrial membrane proteins, which further recruit P62 to the damaged mitochondrion and trigger selective mitophagy. Additionally, PINK1 becomes highly activated through cross-phosphorylation. Parkin and mitochondrial ubiquitin chains are phosphorylated by PINK1. The spatial conformation of phosphorylated Parkin is changed, which leads to the binding of phosphorylated Ub. After this stage, Parkin becomes fully active, and thus the ubiquitin-bound Parkin may transiently associate with mitochondria and interact with substrate proteins. This process compromises the integrity of the outer mitochondrial membrane, thus leading to mitophagy.
Selective autophagy receptors/adapters in yeast and mammals
| Process | Mammals | Yeast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Receptors/Adapters | Positive regulation | Negative regulation | Receptors/Adapters | Positive regulation | Negative regulation | |
| mitophagy | FUNDC1, NIX/BNIP3L, BNIP3, PHB2, NDP52, P62, OPTN, NBR1, TAX1BP1, Miro1, FKBP8, Ambra1, CL, ceramide | AMPK-mediated phosphorylation of ULK1, Phosphorylation of FUNDC1 (S17), Dephosphorylation of FUNDC1 (S13) by PGAM5, Phosphorylation of DRP1(S585), Phosphorylation of BNIP3(S17, S24), OA, CCCP, Hypoxia, Decreased expression of MFN2, ∆ψm↓, Phosphorylation of MFN2, TBK1, Iron depletion, Calcium dysregulation, IKKα, GSK-3β | CK2 and Src-mediated phosphorylation of FUNDC1(S13 and Y18), | Atg32 | Phosphorylation of Atg32 (S114), Atg11 | ― |
| ER-phagy | FAM134B, SEC62, RTN3, CCPG1, ATL3, TEX264, TRIM13, CALCOCO1. | BNIP3, P62, Beclin-1, VPS34, K63-linked Ub on TRIM13, VAPA , VAPB | ― | Atg39, Atg40 | Trs85, Lnp1 | ― |
| proteaphagy | P62 | Proteasome inhibitors, Poly-ubiquitinated RPN1, RPN10 and RPN13, HSC73, ATP | ― | ― | Proteasome inhibitors, Cue5, Hsp42, Ubp3, Snx4, Snx41, Snx42 | Blm10, Spg5, Rpn11, Nat3/Mdm20 complex |
| aggrephagy | P62, NBR1, ALFY , OPTN, Tollip | ― | ― | Cue5 | ― | ― |
| ribophagy | NUFIP1 | VPS34 | ― | ― | Ubp3p/Bre5p, Rim15, Cdc48, Ufd3, arsenite | ― |
| pexophagy | NBR1, P62, ACBD5 | PEX2, ubiquitinated PEX5, PEX14, Atg7, peup1 | USP30 | Atg30, Atg36 | Pex3, Atg37, Atg5, Atg7, Hrr25 kinase | ― |
| lipophagy | ATGL, PNPLA8 | Atg7, ATG14, AMPK, TFE3, TFEB, DNM2, Activation of PPARα, quercetin, flaviviruses, HTT | SOD1 deficiency, Depletion of Rab7, Activation of FXR | ― | ― | ― |
| lysophagy | P62 | LLOMe, UBE2QL1, SCFFBXO27, LRSAM1, TRIM16-galectin-3 complex, galectin-1/3/8/9 | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| nucleophagy | ― | Mutation of LMNA and EMD | ― | Atg39 | Atg1, Atg3, Atg4, Atg7, Atg8, Atg11 | ― |
| xenophagy | P62, NDP52, OPTN, NBR1, TAX1BP1 | TRIM32 | ― | ― | ― | ― |