Project description:The ability to regulate mitophagy in a living system with small molecules remains a great challenge. We hypothesize that adding fragments specific to the key autophagosome protein LC3 to mitochondria will mimic receptor-mediated mitophagy, thus engaging the autophagy-lysosome pathway to induce mitochondrial degradation. Herein, we develop a general biochemical approach to modulate mitophagy, dubbed mito-ATTECs, which employ chimera molecules composed of LC3-binding moieties linked to mitochondria-targeting ligands. Mito-ATTECs trigger mitophagy via targeting mitochondria to autophagosomes through direct interaction between mito-ATTECs and LC3 on mitochondrial membranes. Subsequently, autophagosomes containing mitochondria rapidly fuse with lysosomes to facilitate the degradation of mitochondria. Therefore, mito-ATTECs circumvent the detrimental effects related to disruption of mitochondrial membrane integrity by inducers routinely used to manipulate mitophagy, and provide a versatile biochemical approach to investigate the physiological roles of mitophagy. Furthermore, we found that sustained mitophagy lead to mitochondrial depletion and autophagic cell death in several malignant cell lines (lethal mitophagy). Among them, apoptosis-resistant malignant melanoma cell lines are particularly sensitive to lethal mitophagy. The therapeutic efficacy of mito-ATTECs has been further evaluated by using subcutaneous and pulmonary metastatic melanoma models. Together, the mitochondrial depletion achieved by mito-ATTECs may demonstrate the general concept of inducing cancer cell lethality through excessive mitochondrial clearance, establishing a promising therapeutic paradigm for apoptosis-resistant tumors.
Project description:Degrading pathogenic proteins by degrader technologies such as PROTACs (proteolysis-targeting chimeras) provides promising therapeutic strategies, but selective degradation of non-protein pathogenic biomolecules has been challenging. Here, we demonstrate a novel strategy to degrade non-protein biomolecules by autophagy-tethering compounds (ATTECs), using lipid droplets (LDs) as an exemplar target. LDs are ubiquitous cellular structures storing lipids and could be degraded by autophagy. We hypothesized that compounds interacting with both the LDs and the key autophagosome protein LC3 may enhance autophagic degradation of LDs. We designed and synthesized such compounds by connecting LC3-binding molecules to LD-binding probes via a linker. These compounds were capable of clearing LDs almost completely and rescued LD-related phenotypes in cells and in two independent mouse models with hepatic lipidosis. We further confirmed that the mechanism of action of these compounds was mediated through LC3 and autophagic degradation. Our proof-of-concept study demonstrates the capability of degrading LDs by ATTECs. Conceptually, this strategy could be applied to other protein and non-protein targets.
Project description:Autophagy is an intracellular degradation process that is mediated by de novo formation of autophagosomes. Autophagosome formation involves dynamic morphological changes; a disk-shaped membrane cisterna grows, bends to become a cup-shaped structure, and finally develops into a spherical autophagosome. We have constructed a theoretical model that integrates the membrane morphological change and entropic partitioning of putative curvature generators, which we have used to investigate the autophagosome formation process quantitatively. We show that the membrane curvature and the distribution of the curvature generators stabilize disk- and cup-shaped intermediate structures during autophagosome formation, which is quantitatively consistent with in vivo observations. These results suggest that various autophagy proteins with membrane curvature-sensing properties control morphological change by stabilizing these intermediate structures. Our model provides a framework for understanding autophagosome formation.
Project description:Pivotal to the maintenance of cellular homeostasis, macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) is an evolutionarily conserved degradation system that involves sequestration of cytoplasmic material into the double-membrane autophagosome and targeting of this transport vesicle to the lysosome/late endosome for degradation. EPG5 is a large-sized metazoan protein proposed to serve as a tethering factor to enforce autophagosome-lysosome/late endosome fusion specificity, and its deficiency causes a severe multisystem disorder known as Vici syndrome. Here, we show that human EPG5 (hEPG5) adopts an extended "shepherd's staff" architecture. We find that hEPG5 binds preferentially to members of the GABARAP subfamily of human ATG8 proteins critical to autophagosome-lysosome fusion. The hEPG5-GABARAPs interaction, which is mediated by tandem LIR motifs that exhibit differential affinities, is required for hEPG5 recruitment to mitochondria during PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy. Lastly, we find that the Vici syndrome mutation Gln336Arg does not affect the hEPG5's overall stability nor its ability to engage in interaction with the GABARAPs. Collectively, results from our studies reveal new insights into how hEPG5 recognizes mature autophagosome and establish a platform for examining the molecular effects of Vici syndrome disease mutations on hEPG5.
Project description:Mitophagy is a highly specialized process to remove dysfunctional or superfluous mitochondria through the macroautophagy/autophagy pathway, aimed at protecting cells from the damage of disordered mitochondrial metabolism and apoptosis induction. PINK1, a neuroprotective protein mutated in autosomal recessive Parkinson disease, has been implicated in the activation of mitophagy by selectively accumulating on depolarized mitochondria, and promoting PARK2/Parkin translocation to them. While these steps have been characterized in depth, less is known about the process and site of autophagosome formation upon mitophagic stimuli. A previous study reported that, in starvation-induced autophagy, the proautophagic protein BECN1/Beclin1 (which we previously showed to interact with PINK1) relocalizes at specific regions of contact between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria called mitochondria-associated membranes (MAM), from which the autophagosome originates. Here we show that, following mitophagic stimuli, autophagosomes also form at MAM; moreover, endogenous PINK1 and BECN1 were both found to relocalize at MAM, where they promoted the enhancement of ER-mitochondria contact sites and the formation of omegasomes, that represent autophagosome precursors. PARK2 was also enhanced at MAM following mitophagy induction. However, PINK1 silencing impaired BECN1 enrichment at MAM independently of PARK2, suggesting a novel role for PINK1 in regulating mitophagy. MAM have been recently implicated in many key cellular events. In this light, the observed prevalent localization of PINK1 at MAM may well explain other neuroprotective activities of this protein, such as modulation of mitochondrial calcium levels, mitochondrial dynamics, and apoptosis.
Project description:We previously reported autophagy-mediated degradation of nuclei, nucleophagy, in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae. In this study, we examined whether nuclei are degraded as a whole. We generated A. oryzae mutants deleted for orthologs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae YPT7 and ATG15 which are required, respectively, for autophagosome-vacuole fusion and vacuolar degradation of autophagic bodies. Degradation of histone H2B-EGFP under starvation conditions was greatly decreased in the ΔAoypt7 and ΔAoatg15 mutants. Fluorescence and electron microscopic observations showed that autophagosomes and autophagic bodies surrounding the entire nuclei were accumulated in the cytoplasm of ΔAoypt7 and the vacuole of ΔAoatg15, respectively. These results indicate that nuclei are engulfed in the autophagosomes as a whole and transported/released into the vacuolar lumen where they are degraded.
Project description:Invading pathogens provoke the autophagic machinery and, in a process termed xenophagy, the host cell survives because autophagy is employed as a safeguard for pathogens that escaped phagosomes. However, some pathogens can manipulate the autophagic pathway and replicate within the niche of generated autophagosome-like vesicles. By automated fluorescence-based high content analyses, we demonstrate that Staphylococcus aureus strains (USA300, HG001, SA113) stimulate autophagy and become entrapped in intracellular PtdIns(3)P-enriched vesicles that are decorated with human WIPI-1, an essential PtdIns(3)P effector of canonical autophagy and membrane protein of both phagophores and autophagosomes. Further, agr-positive S. aureus (USA300, HG001) strains were more efficiently entrapped in WIPI-1 positive autophagosome-like vesicles when compared to agr-negative cells (SA113). By confocal and electron microscopy we provide evidence that single- and multiple-Staphylococci entrapped undergo cell division. Moreover, the number of WIPI-1 positive autophagosome-like vesicles entrapping Staphylococci significantly increased upon (i) lysosomal inhibition by bafilomycin A(1) and (ii) blocking PIKfyve-mediated PtdIns(3,5)P(2) generation by YM201636. In summary, our results provide evidence that the PtdIns(3)P effector function of WIPI-1 is utilized during xenophagy of Staphylococcus aureus. We suggest that invading S. aureus cells become entrapped in autophagosome-like WIPI-1 positive vesicles targeted for lysosomal degradation in nonprofessional host cells.
Project description:The folding mechanisms of proteins are increasingly being probed through single-molecule experiments in which the protein is immobilized on a surface. Nevertheless, a clear understanding of how the surface might affect folding, and whether or not it changes folding from its bulk behavior, is lacking. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations of a model beta-barrel protein tethered to a surface to systematically investigate how the surface impacts folding. In the bulk, this protein folds in a three-state manner through a compact intermediate state, and its transition state (TS) has a well formed hydrophobic core. Upon tethering, we find that folding rates and stability are impacted differently by the surface, with dependencies on both the length and location of the tether. Significant changes in folding times are observed for tether points that do not alter the folding temperature. Tethering also locally enhances the formation of structure for residues proximal to the tether point. We find that neither the folding mechanism nor the TS of this protein are altered if the tether is in a fully structured or completely unstructured region of the TS. By contrast, tethering in a partially structured region of the TS leads to dramatic changes. For one such tether point, the intermediate present in bulk folding is eliminated, leading to a two-state folding process with a heterogeneous, highly unstructured TS ensemble. These results have implications for both the design of single-molecule experiments and biotechnological applications of tethered proteins.
Project description:Tethering is a screening technique for discovering small-molecule fragments that bind to pre-determined sites via formation of a disulphide bond. Tethering screens traditionally rely upon mass spectrometry to detect disulphide bind formation, which requires a time-consuming liquid chromatography step. Here we show that Tethering can be performed rapidly and inexpensively using a homogenous fluorescence polarization (FP) assay that detects displacement of a peptide ligand from the protein target as an indirect readout of disulphide formation. We apply this method, termed FP Tethering, to identify fragments that disrupt the protein-protein interaction between the KIX domain of the transcriptional coactivator CBP and the transcriptional activator peptide pKID.