6533b86efe1ef96bd12cc9d5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

RAB18 Loss Interferes With Lipid Droplet Catabolism and Provokes Autophagy Network Adaptations

Daniel SchmittFazilet BekbulatThomas JuretschkePetra BeliHeike HuesmannChristian BehlAndreas KernAnne FeldmannStefan Eimer

subject

rab3 GTP-Binding ProteinsImmunoblottingGTPaseReal-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMicroscopy Electron TransmissionStructural BiologyLipid dropletAutophagyHumansPhosphorylationTyrosineMolecular Biology030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMicroscopy ConfocalChemistryCatabolismAutophagyAutophagosomesLipid DropletsImmunohistochemistryCell biologyrab GTP-Binding ProteinsPhosphorylationlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)RabCRISPR-Cas Systems030217 neurology & neurosurgeryRAB18HeLa Cells

description

Autophagy is dependent on appropriate lipid supply for autophagosome formation. The regulation of lipid acquisition and the autophagy network response to lipid-limiting conditions are mostly elusive. Here, we show that the knockout of the RAB GTPase RAB18 interferes with lipid droplet catabolism, causing an impaired fatty acid release. The resulting reduced lipid-droplet-derived lipid availability influences autophagy and provokes adaptive modifications of the autophagy network. These adjustments include increased expression and phosphorylation of ATG2B as well as augmented formation of the ATG12-ATG5 conjugate. Moreover, ATG9A shows an enhanced phosphorylation at amino acid residues tyrosine 8 and serine 14, resulting in an increased ATG9A trafficking. Via pharmacological inhibition of Y8 phosphorylation, we demonstrate that this ATG9A modification is important to maintain basal autophagy under RAB18 knockout conditions. However, while the network adaptations are sufficient to maintain basal autophagic activity, they are incapable of ensuring autophagy induction upon starvation, which is characterized by an enhanced lipid demand. Thus, here, we define the molecular role of RAB18 in connecting lipid droplets and autophagy, emphasize the significance of lipid droplets as lipid sources for the degradative pathway, and uncover a remarkable autophagy network plasticity, including phosphorylation-dependent ATG9A activation, to compensate reduced lipid availability in order to rescue basal autophagic activity.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2019.12.031