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Autophagosomes form at ER-mitochondria contact sites.
- Source :
-
Nature . 3/21/2013, Vol. 495 Issue 7441, p389-393. 5p. 1 Chart, 4 Graphs. - Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Autophagy is a tightly regulated intracellular bulk degradation/recycling system that has fundamental roles in cellular homeostasis. Autophagy is initiated by isolation membranes, which form and elongate as they engulf portions of the cytoplasm and organelles. Eventually isolation membranes close to form double membrane-bound autophagosomes and fuse with lysosomes to degrade their contents. The physiological role of autophagy has been determined since its discovery, but the origin of autophagosomal membranes has remained unclear. At present, there is much controversy about the organelle from which the membranes originate-the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), mitochondria and plasma membrane. Here we show that autophagosomes form at the ER-mitochondria contact site in mammalian cells. Imaging data reveal that the pre-autophagosome/autophagosome marker ATG14 (also known as ATG14L) relocalizes to the ER-mitochondria contact site after starvation, and the autophagosome-formation marker ATG5 also localizes at the site until formation is complete. Subcellular fractionation showed that ATG14 co-fractionates in the mitochondria-associated ER membrane fraction under starvation conditions. Disruption of the ER-mitochondria contact site prevents the formation of ATG14 puncta. The ER-resident SNARE protein syntaxin 17 (STX17) binds ATG14 and recruits it to the ER-mitochondria contact site. These results provide new insight into organelle biogenesis by demonstrating that the ER-mitochondria contact site is important in autophagosome formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *AUTOPHAGY
*ENDOPLASMIC reticulum
*MITOCHONDRIA
*CYTOPLASM
*ORGANELLES
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00280836
- Volume :
- 495
- Issue :
- 7441
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Nature
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 86214496
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11910