Epithelial paraphagy is a luminal lipophilic signal sensor and promotes transepithelial cholesterol clearance

Author(s):  
Bao Li Zhang (Co-first) ◽  
Bao Ying Liu (Co-First) ◽  
Da Yuan Gao (Co-First) ◽  
Xin Zhou ◽  
Xin Yu Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract Epithelial endocytosis is essential for physiological homeostasis. The current dogma is that all endocytotic mechanisms involve only single-membrane vesicles at the plasma membrane. Here, we report a previously undescribed LC3-associated phagocytosis mechanism which forms double-membrane phagosomes from the epithelial tight-junction paracellular membranes, which we term “paraphagy”. We observed that paraphagy is present in epithelia of the renal, respiratory, circulatory, and male reproductive systems. In the epididymis, paraphagy takes up lipophilic cargo, including apolipoproteins, by involving the surface low-affinity IgG-receptor Fcgr2b and occludin-bound intracellular HDL-receptor ATP5b. In this way, extracellular lipophilic signals are sensed and intracellular phagolysosomes are maintained. Occludin-null male mice show arrested paraphagy and impaired phagolysosome in proximal epididymal compartments, accompanying cholesterol accumulation, ApoJ deposition and dysregulated metabolic-dependent processes in distal compartments, including redox-promoted VK-dependent MGP-carboxylation. We propose that paraphagy senses and distinguishes the luminal lipophilic signals in epithelia and modulates their function via crosstalk across physiological compartments.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunaina Singh ◽  
Sarika Chinchwadkar ◽  
Amol Aher ◽  
Saravanan Matheshwaran ◽  
Ravi Manjithaya

AbstractDuring autophagy, double membrane vesicles called autophagosomes capture and degrade the intracellular cargo. The de novo formation of autophagosomes requires several vesicle transport and membrane fusion events which are not completely understood. We studied the involvement of Exocyst- an octameric tethering complex, which has a primary function in tethering post-Golgi secretory vesicles to plasma membrane, in autophagy. Our findings indicate not all subunits of exocyst are involved in selective and general autophagy. We show that in the absence of autophagy specific subunits, autophagy arrest is accompanied by accumulation of incomplete autophagosome-like structures. In these mutants, impaired Atg9 trafficking leads to decreased delivery of membrane to the site of autophagosome biogenesis thereby impeding the elongation and completion of the autophagosomes. The subunits of exocyst which are dispensable for autophagic function do not associate with the autophagy specific subcomplex of exocyst.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A110-A110
Author(s):  
A HOPKINS ◽  
S WALS ◽  
P VERKADE ◽  
P BOQUET ◽  
A NUSRAT

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