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Atg8 is involved in endosomal and phagosomal acidification in the parasitic protist Entamoeba histolytica
- Source :
- Cellular Microbiology
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Summary Autophagy is one of two major bulk protein degradation systems and is conserved throughout eukaryotes. The protozoan E ntamoeba histolytica, which is a human intestinal parasite, possesses a restricted set of autophagy‐related (Atg) proteins compared with other eukaryotes and thus represents a suitable model organism for studying the minimal essential components and ancestral functions of autophagy. E. histolytica possesses two conjugation systems: Atg8 and Atg5/12, although a gene encoding Atg12 is missing in the genome. Atg8 is considered to be the central and authentic marker of autophagosomes, but recent studies have demonstrated that Atg8 is not exclusively involved in autophagy per se, but other fundamental mechanisms of vesicular traffic. To investigate this question in E . histolytica, we studied on Atg8 during the proliferative stage. Atg8 was constitutively expressed in both laboratory‐maintained and recently established clinical isolates and appeared to be lipid‐modified in logarithmic growth phase, suggesting a role of Atg8 in non‐stress and proliferative conditions. These findings are in contrast to those for E ntamoeba invadens, in which autophagy is markedly induced during an early phase of differentiation from the trophozoite into the cyst. The repression of Atg8 gene expression in En . histolytica by antisense small RNA‐mediated transcriptional gene silencing resulted in growth retardation, delayed endocytosis and reduced acidification of endosomes and phagosomes. Taken together, these results suggest that Atg8 and the Atg8 conjugation pathway have some roles in the biogenesis of endosomes and phagosomes in this primitive eukaryote.
- Subjects :
- Organelle Biogenesis
biology
Endosome
ATG8
Gene Expression Profiling
Immunology
ATG5
Autophagy
Entamoeba histolytica
Protozoan Proteins
Endosomes
Original Articles
Protein degradation
biology.organism_classification
Microbiology
Entamoeba invadens
Cell biology
ATG12
Virology
Phagosomes
parasitic diseases
Original Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14625822
- Volume :
- 17
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cellular microbiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b1f9e566f36d056476c889096666bd6b