1. Academic Validation
  2. Peroxisomal Atg37 binds Atg30 or palmitoyl-CoA to regulate phagophore formation during pexophagy

Peroxisomal Atg37 binds Atg30 or palmitoyl-CoA to regulate phagophore formation during pexophagy

  • J Cell Biol. 2014 Feb 17;204(4):541-57. doi: 10.1083/jcb.201307050.
Taras Y Nazarko 1 Katharine Ozeki Andreas Till Geetha Ramakrishnan Pouya Lotfi Mingda Yan Suresh Subramani
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Section of Molecular Biology, Division of Biological Sciences, and 2 San Diego Center for Systems Biology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093.
Abstract

Autophagy is a membrane trafficking pathway that sequesters proteins and organelles into autophagosomes. The selectivity of this pathway is determined by Autophagy receptors, such as the Pichia pastoris autophagy-related protein 30 (Atg30), which controls the selective Autophagy of peroxisomes (pexophagy) through the assembly of a receptor protein complex (RPC). However, how the pexophagic RPC is regulated for efficient formation of the phagophore, an isolation membrane that sequesters the peroxisome from the cytosol, is unknown. Here we describe a new, conserved acyl-CoA-binding protein, Atg37, that is an integral peroxisomal membrane protein required specifically for pexophagy at the stage of phagophore formation. Atg30 recruits Atg37 to the pexophagic RPC, where Atg37 regulates the recruitment of the scaffold protein, Atg11. Palmitoyl-CoA competes with Atg30 for Atg37 binding. The human orthologue of Atg37, acyl-CoA-binding domain containing protein 5 (ACBD5), is also peroxisomal and is required specifically for pexophagy. We suggest that Atg37/ACBD5 is a new component and positive regulator of the pexophagic RPC.

Figures