| Literature DB >> 34912806 |
Jiahui Li1,2, Enfeng Gao1,2, Chenguang Xu1,2, Hongna Wang1,2,3, Yongjie Wei1,2,4.
Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is an essential organelle in cells that synthesizes, folds and modifies membrane and secretory proteins. It has a crucial role in cell survival and growth, thus requiring strict control of its quality and homeostasis. Autophagy of the ER fragments, termed ER-phagy or reticulophagy, is an essential mechanism responsible for ER quality control. It transports stress-damaged ER fragments as cargo into the lysosome for degradation to eliminate unfolded or misfolded protein aggregates and membrane lipids. ER-phagy can also function as a host defense mechanism when pathogens infect cells, and its deficiency facilitates viral infection. This review briefly describes the process and regulatory mechanisms of ER-phagy, and its function in host anti-microbial defense during infection.Entities:
Keywords: ER-phagy; autophagy; bacteria; infection; microbial; reticulophagy; virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34912806 PMCID: PMC8667338 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.771353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Molecular mechanism of ER-phagy. Under different stress conditions, ER-phagy receptors FAM134B, SEC62, RTN3L, ATL3, TEX264, CCPG1, C53, and CALCOCO1 bind to LC3 via their LIR motifs and engulf ER structures in need of degradation into the phagocytic vesicles, which subsequently expand and close to form double-membrane autophagosomes. The autophagosome further fuses with the lysosome to form autophagolysosome. The encapsulated ER fragments are eventually degraded by hydrolases in the autolysosomes.
The regulatory role of ER-phagy in infection.
| Microbial pathogens | Experimental cell type | Pathogen effector | ER-regulator | ER-phagy functions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebola virus | Mouse embryonic fibroblast | ND | Fam134b | Suppresses Ebola virus proliferation |
|
| DENV, ZIKV | Human brain microvascular endothelial cells | NS3 | FAM134B | Inhibits viral replication |
|
| DENV, ZIKV | Human alveolar basal epithelial cells | Dengue viral NS1, capsid and Env | ATL2, ATL3 | ND |
|
| WNV | |||||
| DENV, ZIKV | Human brain microvascular endothelial cells | ND | FAM134B | BPIFB3 enhances FAM134B-dependent ER-phagy, restricts viral replication |
|
| FMDV | pig kidney cell line | ND | Sec62 | Promotes ER-stress restoration, inhibits viral replication |
|
| Gram-positive infectious bacteria | Human macrophage | c-di-AMP | STING | Resolves ER stress and rescues phagocytes from death upon infection, controls the enhanced interferon response to infectious live Gram-positive bacteria |
|
|
| Murine macrophage | ND | P62 | Bag2 induced ER-phagy mediates antibacterial defense in macrophages, mitigates ER stress and protects macrophages from apoptosis |
|
ND, not determined.
FIGURE 2Interaction of pathogenic microorganisms with ER-phagy. DENVs and ZIKVs inhibit FAM134B-mediated ER-phagy through their NS3 protease, preventing ER autophagic degradation and thus ensuring the availability of synthetic building blocks from the ER necessary for their replication. Host BPIFB3 inhibits FAM134B-dependent ER-phagy in flavivirus-infected cells. For FMDVs, their infection inhibits Sec62-mediated ER-phagy. When Gram-positive bacteria infect cells, the c-di-AMP produced activates the ER-localized immune sensor STING, which subsequently inhibits mTORC1 and initiates ER-phagy to fight the infection. Of note, overexpression of host factor Bag2 in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected murine macrophages induces ER-phagy.