A “hub and spoke” system enables plant cells to efficiently coordinate cellular trafficking, particularly for cellular recycling, the so-called autophagy process. Specialized vesicles, the autophagosomes, engulf harmful molecules and carry them to the vacuole, where they are degraded. During this journey, the autophagosomes mature using molecular mechanisms about which little is known in plants. Now, researchers characterize the mechanism by which autophagy uses the hub and spoke model in plant cells. The findings are published in the Journal of Cell Biology.
Initially, autophagy was thought to be a survival process of cells when they are starved or stressed. However, autophagy is increasingly understood as a quality control mechanism that ensures the cell’s normal functioning by recycling cellular components that have become unwanted or harmful. With the help of autophagy, the cell replenishes its molecular resources and generates some of the energy needed for responding to changes in the environment.
Autophagy operates through autophagosomes, double-membraned vesicles that engulf the material to be degraded. “Autophagosomes are organelles that are born, mature, and die,” says one of the corresponding authors of the study. “We knew quite a bit about how autophagosomes are born, but much less about their maturation path and delivery to their final destination, especially for plant cells.” In plant cells, the “final destination” is the vacuole, a large organelle that occupies around 80% of the cell’s volume and is filled with digestive enzymes.'
Many vesicular organelles, like the autophagosomes, are at work in the cell; they move across the cell in a well-orchestrated manner to mature and fulfill their functions. In their latest publication, the team show that plant autophagosomes do not follow a direct, linear path on their way to the vacuole. “We don’t know yet if this is true for all plant autophagosomes, but we show that at least some of them stop at a different location before reaching the vacuole,” says the author.
Using complementary approaches in biochemistry, cellular imaging, and structural biology, the researchers show that plant autophagosomes first fuse with other endosomal organelles called “multivesicular bodies” (MVBs) to form the so-called “amphisomes.” In turn, the amphisomes then fuse with the vacuole.
Central to their findings is the discovery of the autophagy adaptor CFS1, a molecule that recognizes membrane markers on both the autophagosomes and the MVBs and, thus, mediates their fusion. The researchers demonstrate that the amphisomes function as cellular sorting hubs for the maturation of autophagosomes and their trafficking to the vacuole.
“The trafficking pathways are quite complex, but they all need to be coordinated,” says the author. “Generating vesicles is energetically costly for the cell. Hence, we believe that by using the amphisomes as sorting hubs for autophagosomes, the cell optimizes its energetic efficiency.” The scientists compare this sorting hub model to the “hub and spoke” system seen in the aviation industry and other supply chain logistics. “By having all materials transit through centralized hubs, the cell reduces its logistical costs as fewer routes are necessary. In addition, this system allows the cell to be economical, as complicated operations can be performed in the hubs rather than organized separately in each autophagosome,” the author explains.
The researchers confirmed the function of the autophagy adaptor CFS1 in two evolutionarily distant plant model organisms: Arabidopsis thaliana and Marchantia polymorpha, thus suggesting that this mechanism of autophagosome maturation is conserved across plants. Since autophagy plays a central role in the regulation of cell stress, this research could find future applications in engineering plant vesicular trafficking to help increase plant stress tolerance.
https://rupress.org/jcb/article/221/12/e202203139/213556/Plant-autophagosomes-mature-into-amphisomes-prior
http://sciencemission.com/site/index.php?page=news&type=view&id=publications%2Fplant-autophagosomes&filter=22
A mechanism to degrade autophagosome in plants
- 1,249 views
- Added
Latest News
When do brains grow up?
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
First map of human limb dev…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Predicting organ aging by a…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Map of disease-causing muta…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Linking gene network and pa…
By newseditor
Posted 09 Dec
Other Top Stories
Cognitive fatigue due to exercise
Read more
Oxytocin spreads cooperation in social networks
Read more
Muscle biopsy test as biomarker for early ALS diagnosis
Read more
Inhaled toxic particles take direct route from lungs to brain
Read more
Role of mitochondrial biogenesis in deadly kidney cancer
Read more
Protocols
AA2P-mediated DNA demethyla…
By newseditor
Posted 09 Dec
Brain-wide circuit-specific…
By newseditor
Posted 05 Dec
Cheap, cost-effective, and…
By newseditor
Posted 03 Dec
Temporally multiplexed imag…
By newseditor
Posted 02 Dec
Efficient elimination of ME…
By newseditor
Posted 01 Dec
Publications
Atlas of fetal metabolism d…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Isochronic development of c…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Organ aging signatures in t…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Saturation genome editing o…
By newseditor
Posted 11 Dec
Integrating direct electric…
By newseditor
Posted 10 Dec
Presentations
Hydrogels in Drug Delivery
By newseditor
Posted 12 Apr
Lipids
By newseditor
Posted 31 Dec
Cell biology of carbohydrat…
By newseditor
Posted 29 Nov
RNA interference (RNAi)
By newseditor
Posted 23 Oct
RNA structure and functions
By newseditor
Posted 19 Oct
Posters
A chemical biology/modular…
By newseditor
Posted 22 Aug
Single-molecule covalent ma…
By newseditor
Posted 04 Jul
ASCO-2020-HEALTH SERVICES R…
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar
ASCO-2020-HEAD AND NECK CANCER
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar
ASCO-2020-GENITOURINARY CAN…
By newseditor
Posted 23 Mar