| Literature DB >> 34597140 |
Jonathan M Goodwin1, Ward G Walkup1, Kirsty Hooper2, Taoyingnan Li3,4, Chieko Kishi-Itakura5, Aylwin Ng1, Timothy Lehmberg1, Archana Jha1, Sravya Kommineni1, Katherine Fletcher2, Jorge Garcia-Fortanet1, Yaya Fan6, Qing Tang6, Menghao Wei6, Asmita Agrawal7, Sagar R Budhe7, Sreekanth R Rouduri7, Dan Baird1, Jeff Saunders1, Janna Kiselar8, Mark R Chance8,9, Andrea Ballabio10,11,12,13,14, Brent A Appleton1, John H Brumell3,4,15,16, Oliver Florey2, Leon O Murphy1.
Abstract
Adaptive changes in lysosomal capacity are driven by the transcription factors TFEB and TFE3 in response to increased autophagic flux and endolysosomal stress, yet the molecular details of their activation are unclear. LC3 and GABARAP members of the ATG8 protein family are required for selective autophagy and sensing perturbation within the endolysosomal system. Here, we show that during the conjugation of ATG8 to single membranes (CASM), Parkin-dependent mitophagy, and Salmonella-induced xenophagy, the membrane conjugation of GABARAP, but not LC3, is required for activation of TFEB/TFE3 to control lysosomal capacity. GABARAP directly binds to a previously unidentified LC3-interacting motif (LIR) in the FLCN/FNIP tumor suppressor complex and mediates sequestration to GABARAP-conjugated membrane compartments. This disrupts FLCN/FNIP GAP function toward RagC/D, resulting in impaired substrate-specific mTOR-dependent phosphorylation of TFEB. Thus, the GABARAP-FLCN/FNIP-TFEB axis serves as a molecular sensor that coordinates lysosomal homeostasis with perturbations and cargo flux within the autophagy-lysosomal network.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34597140 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj2485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136