The Evolutionarily Conserved Interaction Between LC3 and p62 Selectively Mediates Autophagy-Dependent Degradation of Mutant Huntingtin
Journal
Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology
Journal Volume
30
Journal Issue
5
Pages
795-806
Date Issued
2010
Date
2010
Author(s)
Abstract
Mammalian p62/sequestosome-1 protein binds to both LC3, the mammalian homologue of yeast Atg8, and polyubiquitinated cargo proteins destined to undergo autophagy-mediated degradation. We previously identified a cargo receptor-binding domain in Atg8 that is essential for its interaction with the cargo receptor Atg19 in selective autophagic processes in yeast. We, thus, sought to determine whether this interaction is evolutionally conserved from yeast to mammals. Using an amino acid replacement approach, we demonstrate that cells expressing mutant LC3 (LC3-K30D, LC3-K51A, or LC3-L53A) all exhibit defective lipidation of LC3, a disrupted LC3-p62 interaction, and impaired autophagic degradation of p62, suggesting that the p62-binding site of LC3 is localized within an evolutionarily conserved domain. Importantly, whereas cells expressing these LC3 mutants exhibited similar overall autophagic activity comparable to that of cells expressing wild-type LC3, autophagy-mediated clearance of the aggregation-prone mutant Huntingtin was defective in the mutant-expressing cells. Together, these results suggest that p62 directly binds to the evolutionarily conserved cargo receptor-binding domain of Atg8/LC3 and selectively mediates the clearance of mutant Huntingtin. ? Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010.
SDGs
Other Subjects
alanine; aspartic acid; huntingtin; leucine; lysine; microtubule associated protein; microtubule associated protein light chain 3; mutant protein; protein p62; ubiquitin; unclassified drug; amino acid substitution; article; autophagosome; autophagy; binding site; cellular distribution; chemical modification; controlled study; human; human cell; lipidation; phagosome; priority journal; protein aggregation; protein degradation; protein domain; protein expression; protein localization; protein protein interaction; wild type; Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing; Amino Acids, Basic; Animals; Autophagy; Cell Death; Cell Line; Evolution, Molecular; Humans; Hydrophobicity; Microtubule-Associated Proteins; Mutant Proteins; Mutation; Nerve Tissue Proteins; Nuclear Proteins; Phagosomes; Protein Binding; Protein Processing, Post-Translational; Protein Transport; Rats; Structure-Activity Relationship; Ubiquitin; Mammalia
Type
journal article
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