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Autophagy and other vacuolar protein degradation mechanisms

Identifieur interne : 002E83 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 002E82; suivant : 002E84

Autophagy and other vacuolar protein degradation mechanisms

Auteurs : P. O. Seglen [Norvège] ; P. Bohley [Allemagne]

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:8E7EA84594231CAF3134A4DF50132C67367DCBB4

English descriptors

Abstract

Abstract: Autophagic degradation of cytoplasm (including protein, RNA etc.) is a non-selective bulk process, as indicated by ultrastructural evidence and by the similarity in autophagic sequestration rates of various cytosolic enzymes with different half-lives. The initial autophagic sequestration step, performed by a poorly-characterized organelle called a phagophore, is subject tofeedback inhibition by purines and amino acids, the effect of the latter being potentiated by insulin and antagonized by glucagon. Epinephrine and other adrenergic agonists inhibit autophagic sequestration through a prazosin-sensitive α1-adrenergic mechanism. The sequestration is also inhibited by cAMP and by protein phosphorylation as indicated by the effects of cyclic nucleotide analogues, phosphodiesterase inhibitors and okadaic acid. Asparagine specifically inhibits autophagic-lysosomal fusion without having any significant effects on autophagic sequestration, on intralysosomal degradation or on the endocytic pathway. Autophaged material that accumulates in prelysosomal vacuoles in the presence of asparagine is accessible to endocytosed enzymes, revealing the existence of an amphifunctional organelle, the amphisome. Evidence from several cell types suggests that endocytosis may be coupled to autophagy to a variable extent, and that the amphisome may play a central role as a collecting station for material destined for lysosomal degradation. Protein degradation can also take place in a ‘salvage compartment’ closely associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this compartment unassembled protein chains are degraded by uncharacterized proteinases, while resident proteins roturn to the ER and assembled secretory and membrane proteins proceed through the Golgi apparatus. In thetrans-Golgi network some proteins are proteolytically processed by Ca2+-dependent proteinases; furthermore, this compartment sorts proteins to lysosomes, various membrane domains, endosomes or secretory vesicles/granules. Processing of both endogenous and exogenous proteins can occurr in endosomes, which may play a particularly important role in antigen processing and presentation. Proteins in endosomes or secretory compartments can either be exocytosed, or channeled to lysosomes for degradation. The switch mechanisms which decide between these options are subject to bioregulation by external agents (hormones and growth factors), and may play an important role in the control of protein uptake and secretion.

Url:
DOI: 10.1007/BF01923509


Affiliations:


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Le document en format XML

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<term>Acid phosphatase</term>
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<term>Amino acids</term>
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<term>Cathepsin</term>
<term>Cell biol</term>
<term>Cell surface</term>
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<term>Cyclic</term>
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<term>Cytosolic</term>
<term>Cytosolic enzymes</term>
<term>Degradation</term>
<term>Degraded</term>
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<term>Endocytic pathway</term>
<term>Endocytic pathways</term>
<term>Endocytosed</term>
<term>Endocytosis</term>
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<term>Endogenous protein</term>
<term>Endoplasmic</term>
<term>Endoplasmic reticulum</term>
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<term>Endosome</term>
<term>Endosomes</term>
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<term>Golgi</term>
<term>Golgi apparatus</term>
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<term>Growth factors</term>
<term>Hepatocytes</term>
<term>Hepatocytic</term>
<term>Hepatocytic autophagy</term>
<term>Hepatocytic protein degradation</term>
<term>Hepatoma cells</term>
<term>High concentrations</term>
<term>Hoyvik</term>
<term>Human fibroblasts</term>
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<term>Intracellular</term>
<term>Intracellular degradation</term>
<term>Intracellular protein catabolism</term>
<term>Intracellular protein degradation</term>
<term>Intracellular transport</term>
<term>Intralysosomal degradation</term>
<term>Invariant chain</term>
<term>Late endosomes</term>
<term>Leupeptin</term>
<term>Ligand</term>
<term>Liver cells</term>
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<term>Macrophage endosomes</term>
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<term>Membrane proteins</term>
<term>Microautophagy</term>
<term>Mortimore</term>
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<term>Natl acad</term>
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<term>Ornithine decarboxylase</term>
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<term>Plasma membrane</term>
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<term>Protein breakdown</term>
<term>Protein degradation</term>
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<term>Proteolytic</term>
<term>Proteolytic processing</term>
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<term>Secretory proteins</term>
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<term>Selective degradation</term>
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<term>Sequestration step</term>
<term>Signal peptides</term>
<term>Trends biochem</term>
<term>Turnover</term>
<term>Ubiquitin</term>
<term>Ubiquitin system</term>
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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: Autophagic degradation of cytoplasm (including protein, RNA etc.) is a non-selective bulk process, as indicated by ultrastructural evidence and by the similarity in autophagic sequestration rates of various cytosolic enzymes with different half-lives. The initial autophagic sequestration step, performed by a poorly-characterized organelle called a phagophore, is subject tofeedback inhibition by purines and amino acids, the effect of the latter being potentiated by insulin and antagonized by glucagon. Epinephrine and other adrenergic agonists inhibit autophagic sequestration through a prazosin-sensitive α1-adrenergic mechanism. The sequestration is also inhibited by cAMP and by protein phosphorylation as indicated by the effects of cyclic nucleotide analogues, phosphodiesterase inhibitors and okadaic acid. Asparagine specifically inhibits autophagic-lysosomal fusion without having any significant effects on autophagic sequestration, on intralysosomal degradation or on the endocytic pathway. Autophaged material that accumulates in prelysosomal vacuoles in the presence of asparagine is accessible to endocytosed enzymes, revealing the existence of an amphifunctional organelle, the amphisome. Evidence from several cell types suggests that endocytosis may be coupled to autophagy to a variable extent, and that the amphisome may play a central role as a collecting station for material destined for lysosomal degradation. Protein degradation can also take place in a ‘salvage compartment’ closely associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this compartment unassembled protein chains are degraded by uncharacterized proteinases, while resident proteins roturn to the ER and assembled secretory and membrane proteins proceed through the Golgi apparatus. In thetrans-Golgi network some proteins are proteolytically processed by Ca2+-dependent proteinases; furthermore, this compartment sorts proteins to lysosomes, various membrane domains, endosomes or secretory vesicles/granules. Processing of both endogenous and exogenous proteins can occurr in endosomes, which may play a particularly important role in antigen processing and presentation. Proteins in endosomes or secretory compartments can either be exocytosed, or channeled to lysosomes for degradation. The switch mechanisms which decide between these options are subject to bioregulation by external agents (hormones and growth factors), and may play an important role in the control of protein uptake and secretion.</div>
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