| Literature DB >> 35510944 |
Yueguang Rong1, Shen Zhang2, Nilay Nandi3, Zhe Wu1, Linsen Li2, Yang Liu4,5, Yuehan Wei6, Yuan Zhao1, Weigang Yuan1, Chuchu Zhou1, Guanghua Xiao7, Beth Levine4,5, Nan Yan8, Shan Mou6, Liufu Deng9, Zaiming Tang2, Xiaoxia Liu2, Helmut Kramer3, Qing Zhong2.
Abstract
The stimulator of interferon genes (STING) plays a critical role in innate immunity. Emerging evidence suggests that STING is important for DNA or cGAMP-induced non-canonical autophagy, which is independent of a large part of canonical autophagy machineries. Here, we report that, in the absence of STING, energy stress-induced autophagy is upregulated rather than downregulated. Depletion of STING in Drosophila fat cells enhances basal- and starvation-induced autophagic flux. During acute exercise, STING knockout mice show increased autophagy flux, exercise endurance, and altered glucose metabolism. Mechanistically, these observations could be explained by the STING-STX17 interaction. STING physically interacts with STX17, a SNARE that is essential for autophagosome biogenesis and autophagosome-lysosome fusion. Energy crisis and TBK1-mediated phosphorylation both disrupt the STING-STX17 interaction, allow different pools of STX17 to translocate to phagophores and mature autophagosomes, and promote autophagic flux. Taken together, we demonstrate a heretofore unexpected function of STING in energy stress-induced autophagy through spatial regulation of autophagic SNARE STX17.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35510944 PMCID: PMC9082627 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202202060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 8.077