Abstract

Starvation-induced autophagosomes engulf cytosol and/or organelles and deliver them to lysosomes for degradation, thereby resupplying depleted nutrients. Despite advances in understanding the molecular basis of this process, the membrane origin of autophagosomes remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that, in starved cells, the outer membrane of mitochondria participates in autophagosome biogenesis. The early autophagosomal marker, Atg5, transiently localizes to punctae on mitochondria, followed by the late autophagosomal marker, LC3. The tail-anchor of an outer mitochondrial membrane protein also labels autophagosomes and is sufficient to deliver another outer mitochondrial membrane protein, Fis1, to autophagosomes. The fluorescent lipid NBD-PS (converted to NBD-phosphotidylethanolamine in mitochondria) transfers from mitochondria to autophagosomes. Photobleaching reveals membranes of mitochondria and autophagosomes are transiently shared. Disruption of mitochondria/ER connections by mitofusin2 depletion dramatically impairs starvation-induced autophagy. Mitochondria thus play a central role in starvation-induced autophagy, contributing membrane to autophagosomes.

Keywords

AutophagosomeAutophagyCell biologyBiologyMitochondrionCytosolFIS1OrganelleATG5Bacterial outer membraneOrganelle biogenesisBiogenesisMitophagyBiochemistrymitochondrial fusionApoptosisMitochondrial DNA

MeSH Terms

AnimalsCell LineCell Physiological PhenomenaCulture MediaGTP PhosphohydrolasesMembrane ProteinsMitochondriaMitochondrial MembranesMitochondrial ProteinsPhagosomesRats

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Volume
141
Issue
4
Pages
656-667
Citations
1357
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1357
OpenAlex
31
Influential
1161
CrossRef

Cite This

Dale W. Hailey, Angelika S. Rambold, Prasanna Satpute‐Krishnan et al. (2010). Mitochondria Supply Membranes for Autophagosome Biogenesis during Starvation. Cell , 141 (4) , 656-667. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2010.04.009

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2010.04.009
PMID
20478256
PMCID
PMC3059894

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%