100 results on '"Gubas A"'
Search Results
2. Long-Term Self-Management of Vaginal Cube Pessaries Can Improve Sexual Life in Patients with Pelvic Organ Prolapse, Results from a Secondary Analysis
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Nemeth, Zoltan, Vida, Peter, Markovic, Predrag, Gubas, Peter, Kovacs, Kalman, and Farkas, Balint
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- 2024
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3. The ABL-MYC axis controls WIPI1-enhanced autophagy in lifespan extension
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Sporbeck, Katharina, Haas, Maximilian L., Pastor-Maldonado, Carmen J., Schüssele, David S., Hunter, Catherine, Takacs, Zsuzsanna, Diogo de Oliveira, Ana L., Franz-Wachtel, Mirita, Charsou, Chara, Pfisterer, Simon G., Gubas, Andrea, Haller, Patricia K., Knorr, Roland L., Kaulich, Manuel, Macek, Boris, Eskelinen, Eeva-Liisa, Simonsen, Anne, and Proikas-Cezanne, Tassula
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- 2023
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4. Self-management of vaginal cube pessaries may be a game changer for pelvic organ prolapse treatment: a long-term follow-up study
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Nemeth, Zoltan, Kolumban, Szilard, Schmidt, Roxana, Gubas, Peter, Kovacs, Kalman, and Farkas, Balint
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- 2023
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5. The ABL-MYC axis controls WIPI1-enhanced autophagy in lifespan extension
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Katharina Sporbeck, Maximilian L. Haas, Carmen J. Pastor-Maldonado, David S. Schüssele, Catherine Hunter, Zsuzsanna Takacs, Ana L. Diogo de Oliveira, Mirita Franz-Wachtel, Chara Charsou, Simon G. Pfisterer, Andrea Gubas, Patricia K. Haller, Roland L. Knorr, Manuel Kaulich, Boris Macek, Eeva-Liisa Eskelinen, Anne Simonsen, and Tassula Proikas-Cezanne
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Human WIPI β-propellers function as PI3P effectors in autophagy, with WIPI4 and WIPI3 being able to link autophagy control by AMPK and TORC1 to the formation of autophagosomes. WIPI1, instead, assists WIPI2 in efficiently recruiting the ATG16L1 complex at the nascent autophagosome, which in turn promotes lipidation of LC3/GABARAP and autophagosome maturation. However, the specific role of WIPI1 and its regulation are unknown. Here, we discovered the ABL-ERK-MYC signalling axis controlling WIPI1. As a result of this signalling, MYC binds to the WIPI1 promoter and represses WIPI1 gene expression. When ABL-ERK-MYC signalling is counteracted, increased WIPI1 gene expression enhances the formation of autophagic membranes capable of migrating through tunnelling nanotubes to neighbouring cells with low autophagic activity. ABL-regulated WIPI1 function is relevant to lifespan control, as ABL deficiency in C. elegans increased gene expression of the WIPI1 orthologue ATG-18 and prolonged lifespan in a manner dependent on ATG-18. We propose that WIPI1 acts as an enhancer of autophagy that is physiologically relevant for regulating the level of autophagic activity over the lifespan.
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- 2023
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6. P447: DECIPHERING THE MITOPHAGY RECEPTOR NETWORK IDENTIFIES A CRUCIAL ROLE FOR OPTINEURIN IN ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA
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Laura Meyer, Sebastian Koschade, Jonas Vischedyk, Marlyn Thölken, Andrea Gubas, Martin Wegner, Marion Basoglu, Stefan Knapp, Manuel Kaulich, Stefan Eimer, Shabnam Shaid, and Christian Brandts
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
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7. State space reconstruction techniques and the accuracy of prediction
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Krakovská, Anna, Pócoš, Štefan, Mojžišová, Karolína, Bečková, Iveta, and Gubáš, Jakub Xaver
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- 2022
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8. Investigating the regulation of WIPI2b function at the phagophore by phosphorylation in starvation-induced autophagy
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Gubas, Andrea, Tooze, Sharon, and Braga, Vania
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571.9 - Abstract
Macroautophagy, here referred to as autophagy, is an intracellular degradation pathway cells use to maintain their homeostasis. Autophagy is also required for cell survival during nutrient deprivation, as well as development and immunity in higher eukaryotes. Aberrations in autophagy can lead to pathologies including cancer, neurodegeneration and diabetes. Autophagy is characterised by the formation of a double membrane phagophore, which sequesters cytosolic cargo and forms a vesicle termed an autophagosome. The autophagosome eventually fuses with the lysosome, resulting in the degradation of the cytosolic cargo. Although autophagosome formation is orchestrated by the sequential action of the core autophagy proteins, a key question remains - what gives rise to a double membrane phagophore? The key event in phagophore biogenesis is the production of PI3P at the phagophore formation sites. WIPI2b, a PI3P effector protein, directly interacts with ATG16L1 and is recruited to the omegasomes, which is the basis for LC3 recruitment to the forming phagophore. To address how the function of WIPI2b at the phagophore is regulated, I focused on phosphorylation, as there have been reports about potential phosphorylation sites on WIPI2b. I confirmed an interactive relationship between WIPI2b and ULK1 that was reported previously and identified a number of phosphorylation sites on WIPI2b upon overexpression of ULK1 kinase. I found that phospho-mutants of WIPI2b S68 exhibit reduced interaction with ATG16L1 and WIPI4. I generated and characterised a WIPI2 CRISPR knockout cell line and found that WIPI2b S68 phospho-mutants are unable to rescue LC3 lipidation in WIPI2 CRISPR knockout cells. I also found that WIPI2b S284 phosphorylation is important for the regulation of WIPI2b association with membranes. I propose WIPI2b phosphorylation by ULK1 provides a feedback loop during autophagy to control the amount of functional WIPI2b at phagophores and therefore allows phagophore elongation.
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- 2018
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9. P447: DECIPHERING THE MITOPHAGY RECEPTOR NETWORK IDENTIFIES A CRUCIAL ROLE FOR OPTINEURIN IN ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA
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Meyer, Laura, primary, Koschade, Sebastian, additional, Vischedyk, Jonas, additional, Thölken, Marlyn, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Wegner, Martin, additional, Basoglu, Marion, additional, Knapp, Stefan, additional, Kaulich, Manuel, additional, Eimer, Stefan, additional, Shaid, Shabnam, additional, and Brandts, Christian, additional
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- 2023
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10. Deciphering the mitophagy receptor network identifies a crucial role for OPTN (optineurin) in acute myeloid leukemia
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Meyer, Laura M., primary, Koschade, Sebastian E., additional, Vischedyk, Jonas B., additional, Thoelken, Marlyn, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Wegner, Martin, additional, Basoglu, Marion, additional, Knapp, Stefan, additional, Kaulich, Manuel, additional, Eimer, Stefan, additional, Shaid, Shabnam, additional, and Brandts, Christian H., additional
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- 2023
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11. Expression of WIPI2B counteracts age-related decline in autophagosome biogenesis in neurons
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Andrea KH Stavoe, Pallavi P Gopal, Andrea Gubas, Sharon A Tooze, and Erika LF Holzbaur
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autophagy ,aging ,autophagosome biogenesis ,neurons ,WIPI2B ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Autophagy defects are implicated in multiple late-onset neurodegenerative diseases including Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, and Parkinson’s diseases. Since aging is the most common shared risk factor in neurodegeneration, we assessed rates of autophagy in mammalian neurons during aging. We identified a significant decrease in the rate of constitutive autophagosome biogenesis during aging and observed pronounced morphological defects in autophagosomes in neurons from aged mice. While early stages of autophagosome formation were unaffected, we detected the frequent production of stalled LC3B-negative isolation membranes in neurons from aged mice. These stalled structures recruited the majority of the autophagy machinery, but failed to develop into LC3B-positive autophagosomes. Importantly, ectopically expressing WIPI2B effectively restored autophagosome biogenesis in aged neurons. This rescue is dependent on the phosphorylation state of WIPI2B at the isolation membrane, suggesting a novel therapeutic target in age-associated neurodegeneration.
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- 2019
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12. A guide to the regulation of selective autophagy receptors
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Ivan Dikic and Andrea Gubas
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Proteomics ,0301 basic medicine ,Autophagosome ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ubiquitin ,Lysosome ,Macroautophagy ,Autophagy ,medicine ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Phosphorylation ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,Chemistry ,Autophagosomes ,Ubiquitination ,Acetylation ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytoplasm ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biology.protein ,Lysosomes ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Function (biology) - Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process cells use to maintain their homeostasis by degrading misfolded, damaged, and excessive proteins, non-functional organelles, foreign pathogens, and other cellular components. Hence, autophagy can be non-selective, where bulky portions of the cytoplasm are degraded upon stress, or a highly selective process, where pre-selected cellular components are degraded. To distinguish between different cellular components, autophagy employs selective autophagy receptors, which will link the cargo to the autophagy machinery, thereby sequestering it in the autophagosome for its subsequent degradation in the lysosome. Autophagy receptors undergo post-translational and structural modifications to fulfil their role in autophagy, or upon executing their role, for their own degradation. We highlight the four most prominent protein modifications - phosphorylation, ubiquitination, acetylation, and oligomerisation - that are essential for autophagy receptor recruitment, function, and turnover. Understanding the regulation of selective autophagy receptors will provide deeper insights into the pathway and open up potential therapeutic avenues.
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- 2021
13. Self-management of vaginal cube pessaries may be a game changer for pelvic organ prolapse treatment: a long-term follow-up study
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Nemeth, Zoltan, primary, Kolumban, Szilard, additional, Schmidt, Roxana, additional, Gubas, Peter, additional, Kovacs, Kalman, additional, and Farkas, Balint, additional
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- 2022
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14. The endolysosomal adaptor PLEKHM1 is a direct target for both mTOR and MAPK pathways
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David G. McEwan, Georg Tascher, Doris Popovic, Andrea Gubas, Daniela S. Krause, Nina Dawe, Marina E. Hoffmann, Ivan Dikic, Christina Karantanou, and Anna Platzek
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medicine.medical_treatment ,Endocytic cycle ,Biophysics ,Autophagy-Related Proteins ,Endosomes ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Structural Biology ,Lysosome ,Autophagy ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Phosphorylation ,Molecular Biology ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,030304 developmental biology ,Calcium signaling ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1 ,0303 health sciences ,Chemistry ,TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Growth factor ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Pleckstrin homology domain ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lysosomes ,HeLa Cells ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The lysosome is a cellular signalling hub at the point of convergence of endocytic and autophagic pathways, where the contents are degraded and recycled. Pleckstrin homology domain-containing family member 1 (PLEKHM1) acts as an adaptor to facilitate the fusion of endocytic and autophagic vesicles with the lysosome. However, it is unclear how PLEKHM1 function at the lysosome is controlled. Herein, we show that PLEKHM1 co-precipitates with, and is directly phosphorylated by, mTOR. Using a phospho-specific antibody against Ser432/S435 of PLEKHM1, we show that the same motif is a direct target for ERK2-mediated phosphorylation in a growth factor-dependent manner. This dual regulation of PLEKHM1 at a highly conserved region points to a convergence of both growth factor- and amino acid-sensing pathways, placing PLEKHM1 at a critical juncture of cellular metabolism.
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- 2021
15. ER remodeling via ER-phagy
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Gubas, A., Dikic, I., and https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8156-9511
- Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a hotspot for many essential cellular functions. The ER membrane is highly dynamic, which affects many cellular processes that take place within the ER. One such process is ER-phagy, a selective degradation of ER fragments (including membranes and luminal content), which serves to preserve the size of ER while adapting its morphology under basal and stress conditions. In order to be degraded, the ER undergoes selective fragmentation facilitated by specialized ER-shaping proteins that also act as ER-phagy receptors. Their ability to sense and induce membrane curvature, as well as to bridge the ER with autophagy machinery, allows for a successful ER fragmentation and delivery of these fragments to the lysosome for degradation and recycling. In this review, we provide insights into ER-phagy from the perspective of membrane remodeling. We highlight the importance of ER membrane dynamics during ER-phagy and emphasize how its dysregulation reflects on human physiology and pathology.
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- 2022
16. Self-management of vaginal cube pessaries may be a game changer for pelvic organ prolapse treatment: a long-term follow-up study
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Zoltan Nemeth, Szilard Kolumban, Roxana Schmidt, Peter Gubas, Kalman Kovacs, and Balint Farkas
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Urology ,Obstetrics and Gynecology - Abstract
Introduction and hypothesis Loss of anatomical support for the pelvic organs results in pelvic organ prolapse (POP). We hypothesized that daily self-management of a cube pessary might be a safe, feasible long-term treatment in women with symptomatic POP. Methods A cohort of 214 symptomatic POP patients (stage 2+) were enrolled prospectively (January to December 2015). Each patient was size-fitted with a space-filling cube pessary and completed a questionnaire online or by phone ≥5 years after her initial fitting. Change in quality of life (QoL) was measured with the Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGI-I). Results Of 185 women included in our analyses, 174 (94%) were continuing to use their pessary 4 weeks post-insertion. Among those, 143 (82.2%) used the pessary successfully for ≥5 years. A large majority of these patients (88.8% [127 out of 143]) described their condition as much or very much improved compared with their pretreatment status (PGI–I). Adverse secondary effects (ASEs) were infrequent [15.4% (22 out of 143)]; when they did occur, they were mild, including smelly vaginal discharge (15 out of 22) and slight vaginal bleeding caused by the fitting procedure (6 out of 22). Conclusions Daily self-management of cube pessaries was found to be a safe and effective treatment for improving POP-related symptoms and QoL in the long term.
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- 2022
17. ER remodeling via ER-phagy
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Gubas, Andrea, primary and Dikic, Ivan, additional
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- 2022
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18. ER remodeling via ER-phagy
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Andrea, Gubas and Ivan, Dikic
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Autophagy ,Humans ,Membrane Proteins ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress ,Lysosomes - Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a hotspot for many essential cellular functions. The ER membrane is highly dynamic, which affects many cellular processes that take place within the ER. One such process is ER-phagy, a selective degradation of ER fragments (including membranes and luminal content), which serves to preserve the size of ER while adapting its morphology under basal and stress conditions. In order to be degraded, the ER undergoes selective fragmentation facilitated by specialized ER-shaping proteins that also act as ER-phagy receptors. Their ability to sense and induce membrane curvature, as well as to bridge the ER with autophagy machinery, allows for a successful ER fragmentation and delivery of these fragments to the lysosome for degradation and recycling. In this review, we provide insights into ER-phagy from the perspective of membrane remodeling. We highlight the importance of ER membrane dynamics during ER-phagy and emphasize how its dysregulation reflects on human physiology and pathology.
- Published
- 2021
19. Metabolic Rewiring Is Essential for AML Cell Survival to Overcome Autophagy Inhibition by Loss of ATG3
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Brandts, Fatima Baker, Ibrahim H. Polat, Khalil Abou-El-Ardat, Islam Alshamleh, Marlyn Thoelken, Daniel Hymon, Andrea Gubas, Sebastian E. Koschade, Jonas B. Vischedyk, Manuel Kaulich, Harald Schwalbe, Shabnam Shaid, and Christian H.
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hemic and lymphatic diseases ,autophagy ,ATG3 ,autophagy inhibition ,acute myeloid leukemia ,metabolic rewiring - Abstract
Autophagy is an important survival mechanism that allows recycling of nutrients and removal of damaged organelles and has been shown to contribute to the proliferation of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells. However, little is known about the mechanism by which autophagy- dependent AML cells can overcome dysfunctional autophagy. In our study we identified autophagy related protein 3 (ATG3) as a crucial autophagy gene for AML cell proliferation by conducting a CRISPR/Cas9 dropout screen with a library targeting around 200 autophagy-related genes. shRNA-mediated loss of ATG3 impaired autophagy function in AML cells and increased their mitochondrial activity and energy metabolism, as shown by elevated mitochondrial ROS generation and mitochondrial respiration. Using tracer-based NMR metabolomics analysis we further demonstrate that the loss of ATG3 resulted in an upregulation of glycolysis, lactate production, and oxidative phosphorylation. Additionally, loss of ATG3 strongly sensitized AML cells to the inhibition of mitochondrial metabolism. These findings highlight the metabolic vulnerabilities that AML cells acquire from autophagy inhibition and support further exploration of combination therapies targeting autophagy and mitochondrial metabolism in AML.
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- 2021
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20. Metabolic Rewiring Is Essential for AML Cell Survival to Overcome Autophagy Inhibition by Loss of ATG3
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Fatima Baker, Ibrahim H. Polat, Khalil Abou-El-Ardat, Islam Alshamleh, Marlyn Thoelken, Daniel Hymon, Andrea Gubas, Sebastian E. Koschade, Jonas B. Vischedyk, Manuel Kaulich, Harald Schwalbe, Shabnam Shaid, and Christian H. Brandts
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autophagy ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,metabolic rewiring ,autophagy inhibition ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,ATG3 ,acute myeloid leukemia ,RC254-282 ,Article - Abstract
Simple Summary The importance of autophagy in leukemia progression and survival has been studied previously. However, little is known about the development of resistance mechanisms to autophagy inhibition in leukemia. Here, we present data on the mechanisms by which leukemia cells maintain their cell survival after inhibition of autophagy by the loss of ATG3. After the loss of ATG3, leukemia cells upregulated their energy metabolism by increasing glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolism, in particular oxidative phosphorylation, which resulted in higher ATP levels. Moreover, inhibition of mitochondrial function strongly impaired cell survival in ATG3 deficiency, thus demonstrating the importance of ATG3 in the regulation of metabolism and survival of leukemic cells. Therefore, our data provide a rationale for combining autophagy inhibitors with inhibitors targeting mitochondrial metabolism for the development of leukemia therapy to overcome the potential obstacle of emerging resistance to autophagy inhibition. Abstract Autophagy is an important survival mechanism that allows recycling of nutrients and removal of damaged organelles and has been shown to contribute to the proliferation of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells. However, little is known about the mechanism by which autophagy- dependent AML cells can overcome dysfunctional autophagy. In our study we identified autophagy related protein 3 (ATG3) as a crucial autophagy gene for AML cell proliferation by conducting a CRISPR/Cas9 dropout screen with a library targeting around 200 autophagy-related genes. shRNA-mediated loss of ATG3 impaired autophagy function in AML cells and increased their mitochondrial activity and energy metabolism, as shown by elevated mitochondrial ROS generation and mitochondrial respiration. Using tracer-based NMR metabolomics analysis we further demonstrate that the loss of ATG3 resulted in an upregulation of glycolysis, lactate production, and oxidative phosphorylation. Additionally, loss of ATG3 strongly sensitized AML cells to the inhibition of mitochondrial metabolism. These findings highlight the metabolic vulnerabilities that AML cells acquire from autophagy inhibition and support further exploration of combination therapies targeting autophagy and mitochondrial metabolism in AML.
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- 2021
21. Metabolic Rewiring Is Essential for AML Cell Survival to Overcome Autophagy Inhibition by Loss of ATG3
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Baker, Fatima, primary, Polat, Ibrahim H., additional, Abou-El-Ardat, Khalil, additional, Alshamleh, Islam, additional, Thoelken, Marlyn, additional, Hymon, Daniel, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Koschade, Sebastian E., additional, Vischedyk, Jonas B., additional, Kaulich, Manuel, additional, Schwalbe, Harald, additional, Shaid, Shabnam, additional, and Brandts, Christian H., additional
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- 2021
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22. Homozygous missense WIPI2 variants cause a congenital disorder of autophagy with neurodevelopmental impairments of variable clinical severity and disease course
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Jill A. Rosenfeld, Marcello Scala, Rauan Kaiyrzhanov, Khalid Hundallah, Fazal Rahim, Andrea Gubas, Sharon A. Tooze, Zahir Ali, Mohamed Abdelhamid, Norah S Alsaleh, Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari, Reza Maroofian, Mariasavina Severino, Henry Houlden, and Maha S. Zaki
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Proband ,Model organisms ,congenital disorders of autophagy ,Microcephaly ,autophagy ,WIPI2 ,Bioinformatics ,Biochemistry & Proteomics ,Imaging ,Signalling & Oncogenes ,Neurodevelopmental disorder ,Intellectual disability ,medicine ,Missense mutation ,Global developmental delay ,Exome sequencing ,Chemical Biology & High Throughput ,business.industry ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01870 ,General Engineering ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,neurodevelopmental disorder ,Editor's Choice ,WIPI2b ,Original Article ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,business ,Congenital disorder - Abstract
WIPI2 is a member of the human WIPI protein family (seven-bladed b-propeller proteins binding phosphatidylinositols, PROPPINs), which play a pivotal role in autophagy and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurological conditions. The homozygous WIPI2 variant c.745G>A; p.(Val249Met) (NM_015610.4) has recently been associated with a neurodevelopmental disorder in a single family. Using exome sequencing and Sanger segregation analysis, here, two novel homozygous WIPI2 variants [c.551T>G; p.(Val184Gly) and c.724C>T; p.(Arg242Trp) (NM_015610.4)] were identified in four individuals of two consanguineous families. Additionally, follow-up clinical data were sought from the previously reported family. Three non-ambulant affected siblings of the first family harbouring the p.(Val184Gly) missense variant presented with microcephaly, profound global developmental delay/intellectual disability, refractory infantile/childhood-onset epilepsy, progressive tetraplegia with joint contractures and dyskinesia. In contrast, the proband of the second family carrying the p.(Arg242Trp) missense variant, similar to the initially reported WIPI2 cases, presented with a milder phenotype, encompassing moderate intellectual disability, speech and visual impairment, autistic features, and an ataxic gait. Brain MR imaging in five patients showed prominent white matter involvement with a global reduction in volume, posterior corpus callosum hypoplasia, abnormal dentate nuclei and hypoplasia of the inferior cerebellar vermis. To investigate the functional impact of these novel WIPI2 variants, we overexpressed both in WIPI2-knockout HEK293A cells. In comparison to wildtype, expression of the Val166Gly WIPI2b mutant resulted in a deficient rescue of LC3 lipidation whereas Arg224Trp mutant increased LC3 lipidation, in line with the previously reported Val231Met variant. These findings support a dysregulation of the early steps of the autophagy pathway. Collectively, our findings provide evidence that biallelic WIPI2 variants cause a neurodevelopmental disorder of variable severity and disease course. Our report expands the clinical spectrum and establishes WIPI2-related disorder as a congenital disorders of autophagy., Maroofian et al. reported two novel homozygous WIPI2 variants [c.551T>G; p.(Val184Gly) and c.724C>T; p.(Arg242Trp) (NM_015610.4)] in four individuals of two consanguineous families with neurodevelopmental disorder and brain abnormalities. Expression of the Val184Gly mutant in WIPI2-knockout HEK293A cells resulted in a deficient LC3 lipidation rescue whereas Arg242Trp mutant increased LC3 lipidation., Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract
- Published
- 2021
23. A nonlinear lower bound on the practical combinational complexity
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Gubáš, Xaver, Hromkovič, Juraj, Waczulík, Juraj, Goos, Gerhard, editor, Hartmanis, Juris, editor, Finkel, Alain, editor, and Jantzen, Matthias, editor
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- 1992
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24. A mutation in the major autophagy gene, WIPI2, associated with global developmental abnormalities
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Asifullah Khan, Jamal Nasir, Musharraf Jelani, Hannah C. Dooley, Jumana Y. Al-Aama, Nirmal Vadgama, Hussein Sheikh Ali Mohamoud, Amin Jan, Andrea Gubas, Sharon A. Tooze, Fazal Rahim, Muhammad Ismail Khan, Muhammad Tariq Masood Khan, Changsoo Kang, and Zahir Ali
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Nonsynonymous substitution ,autophagy ,WIPI2 ,Developmental Disabilities ,Mutant ,Biology ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,03 medical and health sciences ,Exon ,0302 clinical medicine ,LC3 ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,gene ,ATG16L1 ,Cells, Cultured ,Exome sequencing ,Genetics ,Autophagy ,Membrane Proteins ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,Phosphate-Binding Proteins ,Pedigree ,3. Good health ,HEK293 Cells ,030104 developmental biology ,Mutation ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,Autophagosome assembly ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,exome sequencing ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Defects in autophagy are implicated in a growing number of diseases. Jelani et al. identify a mutation in WIPI2, a major autophagy gene, associated with a multisystemic global developmental disorder. Functional studies in cell lines derived from patients reveal significant reductions in the classic hallmarks of autophagy., We describe a large consanguineous pedigree from a remote area of Northern Pakistan, with a complex developmental disorder associated with wide-ranging symptoms, including mental retardation, speech and language impairment and other neurological, psychiatric, skeletal and cardiac abnormalities. We initially carried out a genetic study using the HumanCytoSNP-12 v2.1 Illumina gene chip on nine family members and identified a single region of homozygosity shared amongst four affected individuals on chromosome 7p22 (positions 3059377–5478971). We performed whole-exome sequencing on two affected individuals from two separate branches of the extended pedigree and identified a novel nonsynonymous homozygous mutation in exon 9 of the WIPI2 (WD-repeat protein interacting with phosphoinositide 2) gene at position 5265458 (c.G745A;pV249M). WIPI2 plays a critical role in autophagy, an evolutionary conserved cellular pathway implicated in a growing number of medical conditions. The mutation is situated in a highly conserved and critically important region of WIPI2, responsible for binding PI(3)P and PI(3,5)P2, an essential requirement for autophagy to proceed. The mutation is absent in all public databases, is predicted to be damaging and segregates with the disease phenotype. We performed functional studies in vitro to determine the potential effects of the mutation on downstream pathways leading to autophagosome assembly. Binding of the V231M mutant of WIPI2b to ATG16L1 (as well as ATG5–12) is significantly reduced in GFP pull-down experiments, and fibroblasts derived from the patients show reduced WIPI2 puncta, reduced LC3 lipidation and reduced autophagic flux.
- Published
- 2019
25. A guide to the regulation of selective autophagy receptors
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Gubas, Andreas and Đikić, Ivan
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ddc:570 ,ddc:610 - Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process cells use to maintain their homeostasis by degrading misfolded, damaged and excessive proteins, nonfunctional organelles, foreign pathogens and other cellular components. Hence, autophagy can be nonselective, where bulky portions of the cytoplasm are degraded upon stress, or a highly selective process, where preselected cellular components are degraded. To distinguish between different cellular components, autophagy employs selective autophagy receptors, which will link the cargo to the autophagy machinery, thereby sequestering it in the autophagosome for its subsequent degradation in the lysosome. Autophagy receptors undergo post-translational and structural modifications to fulfil their role in autophagy, or upon executing their role, for their own degradation. We highlight the four most prominent protein modifications – phosphorylation, ubiquitination, acetylation and oligomerisation – that are essential for autophagy receptor recruitment, function and turnover. Understanding the regulation of selective autophagy receptors will provide deeper insights into the pathway and open up potential therapeutic avenues.
- Published
- 2021
26. Suppression of autophagy during mitosis via CUL4-RING ubiquitin ligases-mediated WIPI2 polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation
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Chenxi Ouyang, Han-Ming Shen, Juan Yi, Yihua Wu, Liming Wang, Ruey-Hwa Chen, Nai-Di Yang, Guang Lu, Andrea Gubas, Man Wu, Shuo Deng, Tianru Wang, Ya-Ting Wang, Yi Ren, Hayden Weng Siong Tan, Sharon A. Tooze, Yin Shi, and Dajing Xia
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Model organisms ,Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex ,NEDD8 Protein ,Leupeptins ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,Mitosis ,Cyclopentanes ,Ubiquitin-Activating Enzymes ,mTORC1 ,Biochemistry & Proteomics ,Imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signalling & Oncogenes ,Autophagy ,Humans ,Cyclin B1 ,Protein kinase A ,Molecular Biology ,Mechanistic target of rapamycin ,Cellular Senescence ,Chemical Biology & High Throughput ,Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,biology ,Ubiquitin ,Ubiquitination ,Membrane Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Phosphate-Binding Proteins ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,HEK293 Cells ,Pyrimidines ,030104 developmental biology ,biology.protein ,Aurora Kinase B ,MAP1LC3B ,Research Paper ,HeLa Cells ,Protein Binding ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Macroautophagy/autophagy is a cellular process in which cytosolic contents are degraded by lysosome in response to various stress conditions. Apart from its role in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis, autophagy also involves in regulation of cell cycle progression under nutrient-deprivation conditions. However, whether and how autophagy is regulated by the cell cycle especially during mitosis remains largely undefined. Here we show that WIPI2/ATG18B (WD repeat domain, phosphoinositide interacting 2), an autophagy-related (ATG) protein that plays a critical role in autophagosome biogenesis, is a direct substrate of CUL4-RING ubiquitin ligases (CRL4s). Upon mitosis induction, CRL4s are activated via neddylation, and recruit WIPI2 via DDB1 (damage specific DNA binding protein 1), leading to polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of WIPI2 and suppression of autophagy. The WIPI2 protein level and autophagy during mitosis could be rescued by knockdown of CRL4s or treatment with MLN4924/Pevonedistat, a selective inhibitor of CRLs, via suppression of NAE1 (NEDD8 activating enzyme E1 subunit 1). Moreover, restoration of WIPI2 rescues autophagy during mitosis and leads to mitotic slippage and cell senescence. Our study thus discovers a novel function of CRL4s in autophagy by targeting WIPI2 for polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation during mitosis. Abbreviations: ACTB, actin beta; ATG, autophagy-related; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; AURKB/ARK2, aurora kinase B; BafA1, bafilomycin A1; CCNB1, cyclin B1; CDK1, cyclin dependent kinase 1; CHX, cycloheximide; CQ, chloroquine; CRL4s, CUL4-RING ubiquitin ligases; DDB1, damage specific DNA binding protein 1; GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; GFP, green fluorescent protein; GST, glutathione S-transferase; MAP1LC3B/LC3B, microtubule associated protein 1 light chain 3 beta; STK11/LKB1,serine/threonine kinase 11; MTORC1/MTOR complex 1, mechanistic target of rapamycin kinase complex 1; NAE1, NEDD8 activating enzyme E1 subunit 1; NOC, nocodazole; RING, really interesting new gene; RBX1, ring-box 1; SA-GLB1/β-gal, senescence-associated galactosidase beta 1; TSC2, TSC complex subunit 2; TUBA, tubulin alpha; WIPI2, WD repeat domain, phosphoinositide interacting 2
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A molecular perspective of mammalian autophagosome biogenesis
- Author
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Andrea Gubas, Thomas J. Mercer, and Sharon A. Tooze
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Autophagosome ,Model organisms ,autophagy ,intracellular trafficking ,WIPI2 ,Autophagy-Related Proteins ,Cellular homeostasis ,Infections ,Biochemistry & Proteomics ,Biochemistry ,Imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signalling & Oncogenes ,phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) ,Neoplasms ,Animals ,Autophagy-Related Protein-1 Homolog ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,VPS34 ,ULK1 ,Chemical Biology & High Throughput ,Thematic Minireviews ,Effector ,Kinase ,Chemistry ,Autophagy ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Cell Biology ,Class III Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Transmembrane protein ,ATG proteins ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,post-translational modification ,Immune System Diseases ,Starvation ,signaling ,ATG9 ,Biogenesis - Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved process and is essential for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis. Autophagy occurs at a basal level in all cells, but it can be up-regulated during stress, starvation, or infection. Misregulation of autophagy has been linked to various disorders, including cancer, neurodegeneration, and immune diseases. Here, we discuss the essential proteins acting in the formation of an autophagosome, with a focus on the ULK and VPS34 kinase complexes, phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate effector proteins, and the transmembrane autophagy-related protein ATG9. The function and regulation of these and other autophagy-related proteins acting during formation will be addressed, in particular during amino acid starvation.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Minimized combinatorial CRISPR screens identify genetic interactions in autophagy
- Author
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Diehl, Valentina, Wegner, Martin, Grumati, Paolo, Husnjak, Koraljka, Schaubeck, Simone, Gubas, Andrea, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, Polat, Ibrahim H., Langschied, Felix, Prieto García, Cristian, Müller, Konstantin, Kalousi, Alkmini, Ebersberger, Ingo, Brandts, Christian Hubertus, Đikić, Ivan, Kaulich, Manuel, Diehl, Valentina, Wegner, Martin, Grumati, Paolo, Husnjak, Koraljka, Schaubeck, Simone, Gubas, Andrea, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, Polat, Ibrahim H., Langschied, Felix, Prieto García, Cristian, Müller, Konstantin, Kalousi, Alkmini, Ebersberger, Ingo, Brandts, Christian Hubertus, Đikić, Ivan, and Kaulich, Manuel
- Abstract
Combinatorial CRISPR-Cas screens have advanced the mapping of genetic interactions, but their experimental scale limits the number of targetable gene combinations. Here, we describe 3Cs multiplexing, a rapid and scalable method to generate highly diverse and uniformly distributed combinatorial CRISPR libraries. We demonstrate that the library distribution skew is the critical determinant of its required screening coverage. By circumventing iterative cloning of PCR-amplified oligonucleotides, 3Cs multiplexing facilitates the generation of combinatorial CRISPR libraries with low distribution skews. We show that combinatorial 3Cs libraries can be screened with minimal coverages, reducing associated efforts and costs at least 10-fold. We apply a 3Cs multiplexing library targeting 12,736 autophagy gene combinations with 247,032 paired gRNAs in viability and reporter-based enrichment screens. In the viability screen, we identify, among others, the synthetic lethal WDR45B-PIK3R4 and the proliferation-enhancing ATG7-KEAP1 genetic interactions. In the reporter-based screen, we identify over 1,570 essential genetic interactions for autophagy flux, including interactions among paralogous genes, namely ATG2A-ATG2B, GABARAP-MAP1LC3B and GABARAP-GABARAPL2. However, we only observe few genetic interactions within paralogous gene families of more than two members, indicating functional compensation between them. This work establishes 3Cs multiplexing as a platform for genetic interaction screens at scale.
- Published
- 2021
29. Homozygous missense WIPI2 variants cause a congenital disorder of autophagy with neurodevelopmental impairments of variable clinical severity and disease course
- Author
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Maroofian, Reza, Gubas, Andrea, Kaiyrzhanov, Rauan, Scala, Marcello, Hundallah, Khalid, Severino, Mariasavina, Abdel-Hamid, Mohamed S, Rosenfeld, Jill A, Ebrahimi-Fakhari, Darius, Ali, Zahir, Rahim, Fazal, Houlden, Henry, Tooze, Sharon A., Alsaleh, Norah S, Zaki, Maha S, Maroofian, Reza, Gubas, Andrea, Kaiyrzhanov, Rauan, Scala, Marcello, Hundallah, Khalid, Severino, Mariasavina, Abdel-Hamid, Mohamed S, Rosenfeld, Jill A, Ebrahimi-Fakhari, Darius, Ali, Zahir, Rahim, Fazal, Houlden, Henry, Tooze, Sharon A., Alsaleh, Norah S, and Zaki, Maha S
- Abstract
WIPI2 is a member of the human WIPI protein family (seven-bladed b-propeller proteins binding phosphatidylinositols, PROPPINs), which play a pivotal role in autophagy and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurological conditions. The homozygous WIPI2 variant c.745G>A; p.(Val249Met) (NM_015610.4) has recently been associated with a neurodevelopmental disorder in a single family. Using exome sequencing and Sanger segregation analysis, here, two novel homozygous WIPI2 variants [c.551T>G; p.(Val184Gly) and c.724C>T; p.(Arg242Trp) (NM_015610.4)] were identified in four individuals of two consanguineous families. Additionally, follow-up clinical data were sought from the previously reported family. Three non-ambulant affected siblings of the first family harbouring the p.(Val184Gly) missense variant presented with microcephaly, profound global developmental delay/intellectual disability, refractory infantile/childhood-onset epilepsy, progressive tetraplegia with joint contractures and dyskinesia. In contrast, the proband of the second family carrying the p.(Arg242Trp) missense variant, similar to the initially reported WIPI2 cases, presented with a milder phenotype, encompassing moderate intellectual disability, speech and visual impairment, autistic features, and an ataxic gait. Brain MR imaging in five patients showed prominent white matter involvement with a global reduction in volume, posterior corpus callosum hypoplasia, abnormal dentate nuclei and hypoplasia of the inferior cerebellar vermis. To investigate the functional impact of these novel WIPI2 variants, we overexpressed both in WIPI2-knockout HEK293A cells. In comparison to wildtype, expression of the Val166Gly WIPI2b mutant resulted in a deficient rescue of LC3 lipidation whereas Arg224Trp mutant increased LC3 lipidation, in line with the previously reported Val231Met variant. These findings support a dysregulation of the early steps of the autophagy pathway. Collectively, our findings provid
- Published
- 2021
30. A guide to the regulation of selective autophagy receptors
- Author
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Gubas, Andrea, Đikić, Ivan, Gubas, Andrea, and Đikić, Ivan
- Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process cells use to maintain their homeostasis by degrading misfolded, damaged and excessive proteins, nonfunctional organelles, foreign pathogens and other cellular components. Hence, autophagy can be nonselective, where bulky portions of the cytoplasm are degraded upon stress, or a highly selective process, where preselected cellular components are degraded. To distinguish between different cellular components, autophagy employs selective autophagy receptors, which will link the cargo to the autophagy machinery, thereby sequestering it in the autophagosome for its subsequent degradation in the lysosome. Autophagy receptors undergo post-translational and structural modifications to fulfil their role in autophagy, or upon executing their role, for their own degradation. We highlight the four most prominent protein modifications – phosphorylation, ubiquitination, acetylation and oligomerisation – that are essential for autophagy receptor recruitment, function and turnover. Understanding the regulation of selective autophagy receptors will provide deeper insights into the pathway and open up potential therapeutic avenues.
- Published
- 2021
31. Metabolic rewiring is essential for AML cell survival to overcome autophagy inhibition by loss of ATG3
- Author
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Baker, Fatima, Polat, Halil Ibrahim, Abou-El-Ardat, Khalil, Alshamleh, Islam, Thölken, Marlyn, Hymon, Daniel, Gubas, Andrea, Koschade-Rixner, Sebastian E., Vischedyk, Jonas B., Kaulich, Manuel, Schwalbe, Harald, Shaid, Shabnam, Brandts, Christian Hubertus, Baker, Fatima, Polat, Halil Ibrahim, Abou-El-Ardat, Khalil, Alshamleh, Islam, Thölken, Marlyn, Hymon, Daniel, Gubas, Andrea, Koschade-Rixner, Sebastian E., Vischedyk, Jonas B., Kaulich, Manuel, Schwalbe, Harald, Shaid, Shabnam, and Brandts, Christian Hubertus
- Abstract
Autophagy is an important survival mechanism that allows recycling of nutrients and removal of damaged organelles and has been shown to contribute to the proliferation of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells. However, little is known about the mechanism by which autophagy- dependent AML cells can overcome dysfunctional autophagy. In our study we identified autophagy related protein 3 (ATG3) as a crucial autophagy gene for AML cell proliferation by conducting a CRISPR/Cas9 dropout screen with a library targeting around 200 autophagy-related genes. shRNA-mediated loss of ATG3 impaired autophagy function in AML cells and increased their mitochondrial activity and energy metabolism, as shown by elevated mitochondrial ROS generation and mitochondrial respiration. Using tracer-based NMR metabolomics analysis we further demonstrate that the loss of ATG3 resulted in an upregulation of glycolysis, lactate production, and oxidative phosphorylation. Additionally, loss of ATG3 strongly sensitized AML cells to the inhibition of mitochondrial metabolism. These findings highlight the metabolic vulnerabilities that AML cells acquire from autophagy inhibition and support further exploration of combination therapies targeting autophagy and mitochondrial metabolism in AML.
- Published
- 2021
32. Minimized combinatorial CRISPR screens identify genetic interactions in autophagy
- Author
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Diehl, Valentina, primary, Wegner, Martin, additional, Grumati, Paolo, additional, Husnjak, Koraljka, additional, Schaubeck, Simone, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, additional, Polat, Ibrahim H, additional, Langschied, Felix, additional, Prieto-Garcia, Cristian, additional, Müller, Konstantin, additional, Kalousi, Alkmini, additional, Ebersberger, Ingo, additional, Brandts, Christian H, additional, Dikic, Ivan, additional, and Kaulich, Manuel, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A guide to the regulation of selective autophagy receptors
- Author
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Gubas, Andrea, primary and Dikic, Ivan, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Combinatorial CRISPR screening reveals functional buffering in autophagy
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Ingo Ebersberger, Simone Schaubeck, Andrea Gubas, Martin Wegner, Paolo Grumati, Felix Langschied, Alkmini Kalousi, Manuel Kaulich, Valentina Diehl, Varun Jayeshkumar Shah, Koraljka Husnjak, and Ivan Dikic
- Subjects
ved/biology ,Cell ,Autophagy ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Phenotype ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,CRISPR ,Guide RNA ,Model organism ,Functional genomics ,Gene - Abstract
Functional genomics studies in model organisms and human cell lines provided important insights into gene functions and their context-dependent role in genetic circuits. However, our functional understanding of many of these genes and how they combinatorically regulate key biological processes, remains limited. To enable the SpCas9-dependent mapping of gene-gene interactions in human cells, we established 3Cs multiplexing for the generation of combinatorial gRNA libraries in a distribution-unbiased manner and demonstrate its robust performance. The optimal number for combinatorial hit calling was 16 gRNA pairs and the skew of a library’s distribution was identified as a critical parameter dictating experimental scale and data quality. Our approach enabled us to investigate 247,032 gRNA-pairs targeting 12,736 gene-interactions in human autophagy. We identified novel genes essential for autophagy and provide experimental evidence that gene-associated categories of phenotypic strengths exist in autophagy. Furthermore, circuits of autophagy gene interactions reveal redundant nodes driven by paralog genes. Our combinatorial 3Cs approach is broadly suitable to investigate unexpected gene-interaction phenotypes in unperturbed and diseased cell contexts.
- Published
- 2020
35. Expression of WIPI2B counteracts age-related decline in autophagosome biogenesis in neurons
- Author
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Andrea K.H. Stavoe, Erika L.F. Holzbaur, Sharon A. Tooze, Andrea Gubas, and Pallavi P. Gopal
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Autophagosome ,Model organisms ,autophagy ,Aging ,autophagosome biogenesis ,Mouse ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Autophagy-Related Proteins ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Biochemistry & Proteomics ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,12. Responsible consumption ,Imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Signalling & Oncogenes ,0302 clinical medicine ,WIPI2B ,Isolation membrane ,Age related ,medicine ,Animals ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Biology (General) ,Neurons ,Chemical Biology & High Throughput ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Neuroscience ,Neurodegeneration ,Autophagy ,Autophagosomes ,General Medicine ,Cell Biology ,Phosphate-Binding Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Phosphorylation ,Medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biogenesis ,Research Article ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Autophagy defects are implicated in multiple late-onset neurodegenerative diseases including Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, and Parkinson’s diseases. Since aging is the most common shared risk factor in neurodegeneration, we assessed rates of autophagy in mammalian neurons during aging. We identified a significant decrease in the rate of constitutive autophagosome biogenesis during aging and observed pronounced morphological defects in autophagosomes in neurons from aged mice. While early stages of autophagosome formation were unaffected, we detected the frequent production of stalled LC3B-negative isolation membranes in neurons from aged mice. These stalled structures recruited the majority of the autophagy machinery, but failed to develop into LC3B-positive autophagosomes. Importantly, ectopically expressing WIPI2B effectively restored autophagosome biogenesis in aged neurons. This rescue is dependent on the phosphorylation state of WIPI2B at the isolation membrane, suggesting a novel therapeutic target in age-associated neurodegeneration., eLife digest Unlike most of the cells in our body, our neurons are as old as we are: while other cell types are replaced as they wear out, our neurons must last our entire lifetime. The symptoms of disorders such as Alzheimer's disease and ALS result from neurons in the brain or spinal cord degenerating or dying. But why do neurons sometimes die? One reason may be that elderly neurons struggle to remove waste products. Cells get rid of worn out or damaged components through a process called autophagy. A membranous structure known as the autophagosome engulfs waste materials, before it fuses with another structure, the lysosome, which contains enzymes that break down and recycle the waste. If any part of this process fails, waste products instead build up inside cells. This prevents the cells from working properly and eventually kills them. Aging is the major shared risk factor for many diseases in which brain cells slowly die. Could this be because autophagy becomes less effective with age? Stavoe et al. isolated neurons from young adult, aging and aged mice, and used live cell microscopy to follow autophagy in real time. The results determined that autophagy does indeed work less efficiently in elderly neurons. The reason is that the formation of the autophagosome stalls halfway through. However, increasing the amount of one specific protein, WIPI2B, rescues this defect and enables the cells to produce normal autophagosomes again. As long-lived cells, neurons depend on autophagy to stay healthy. Without this trash disposal system, neurons accumulate clumps of damaged proteins and eventually start to break down. The results of Stavoe et al. identify one way of overcoming this aging-related problem. As well as providing insights into neuronal biology, the results suggest a new therapeutic approach to be developed and tested in the future.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Combinatorial CRISPR screening reveals functional buffering in autophagy
- Author
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Diehl, Valentina, Wegner, Martin, Grumati, Paolo, Husnjak, Koraljka, Schaubeck, Simone, Gubas, Andrea, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, Langschied, Felix, Kalousi, Alkmini, Ebersberger, Ingo, Đikić, Ivan, Kaulich, Manuel, Diehl, Valentina, Wegner, Martin, Grumati, Paolo, Husnjak, Koraljka, Schaubeck, Simone, Gubas, Andrea, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, Langschied, Felix, Kalousi, Alkmini, Ebersberger, Ingo, Đikić, Ivan, and Kaulich, Manuel
- Abstract
Functional genomics studies in model organisms and human cell lines provided important insights into gene functions and their context-dependent role in genetic circuits. However, our functional understanding of many of these genes and how they combinatorically regulate key biological processes, remains limited. To enable the SpCas9-dependent mapping of gene-gene interactions in human cells, we established 3Cs multiplexing for the generation of combinatorial gRNA libraries in a distribution-unbiased manner and demonstrate its robust performance. The optimal number for combinatorial hit calling was 16 gRNA pairs and the skew of a library’s distribution was identified as a critical parameter dictating experimental scale and data quality. Our approach enabled us to investigate 247,032 gRNA-pairs targeting 12,736 gene-interactions in human autophagy. We identified novel genes essential for autophagy and provide experimental evidence that gene-associated categories of phenotypic strengths exist in autophagy. Furthermore, circuits of autophagy gene interactions reveal redundant nodes driven by paralog genes. Our combinatorial 3Cs approach is broadly suitable to investigate unexpected gene-interaction phenotypes in unperturbed and diseased cell contexts.
- Published
- 2020
37. The endolysosomal adaptor PLEKHM1 is a direct target for both mTOR and MAPK pathways
- Author
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Gubas, Andrea, primary, Karantanou, Christina, additional, Popovic, Doris, additional, Tascher, Georg, additional, Hoffmann, Marina E., additional, Platzek, Anna, additional, Dawe, Nina, additional, Dikic, Ivan, additional, Krause, Daniela S., additional, and McEwan, David G., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Homozygous missense WIPI2 variants cause a congenital disorder of autophagy with neurodevelopmental impairments of variable clinical severity and disease course
- Author
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Maroofian, Reza, primary, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Kaiyrzhanov, Rauan, additional, Scala, Marcello, additional, Hundallah, Khalid, additional, Severino, Mariasavina, additional, Abdel-Hamid, Mohamed S, additional, Rosenfeld, Jill A, additional, Ebrahimi-Fakhari, Darius, additional, Ali, Zahir, additional, Rahim, Fazal, additional, Houlden, Henry, additional, Tooze, Sharon A, additional, Alsaleh, Norah S, additional, and Zaki, Maha S, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Combinatorial CRISPR screening reveals functional buffering in autophagy
- Author
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Diehl, Valentina, primary, Wegner, Martin, additional, Grumati, Paolo, additional, Husnjak, Koraljka, additional, Schaubeck, Simone, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Shah, Varun Jayeshkumar, additional, Langschied, Felix, additional, Kalousi, Alkmini, additional, Ebersberger, Ingo, additional, Dikic, Ivan, additional, and Kaulich, Manuel, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A guide to the regulation of selective autophagy receptors.
- Author
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Gubas, Andrea and Dikic, Ivan
- Subjects
- *
POST-translational modification , *AUTOPHAGY , *CELL anatomy , *UBIQUITINATION , *ORGANELLES - Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process cells use to maintain their homeostasis by degrading misfolded, damaged and excessive proteins, nonfunctional organelles, foreign pathogens and other cellular components. Hence, autophagy can be nonselective, where bulky portions of the cytoplasm are degraded upon stress, or a highly selective process, where preselected cellular components are degraded. To distinguish between different cellular components, autophagy employs selective autophagy receptors, which will link the cargo to the autophagy machinery, thereby sequestering it in the autophagosome for its subsequent degradation in the lysosome. Autophagy receptors undergo post‐translational and structural modifications to fulfil their role in autophagy, or upon executing their role, for their own degradation. We highlight the four most prominent protein modifications – phosphorylation, ubiquitination, acetylation and oligomerisation – that are essential for autophagy receptor recruitment, function and turnover. Understanding the regulation of selective autophagy receptors will provide deeper insights into the pathway and open up potential therapeutic avenues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Author response: Expression of WIPI2B counteracts age-related decline in autophagosome biogenesis in neurons
- Author
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Andrea Gubas, Andrea K.H. Stavoe, Pallavi P. Gopal, Erika L.F. Holzbaur, and Sharon A. Tooze
- Subjects
Autophagosome ,Expression (architecture) ,Age related ,Biology ,Biogenesis ,Cell biology - Published
- 2019
42. Expression of WIPI2B counteracts age-related decline in autophagosome biogenesis in neurons
- Author
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Stavoe, Andrea KH, primary, Gopal, Pallavi P, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Tooze, Sharon A, additional, and Holzbaur, Erika LF, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Author response: Expression of WIPI2B counteracts age-related decline in autophagosome biogenesis in neurons
- Author
-
Stavoe, Andrea KH, primary, Gopal, Pallavi P, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Tooze, Sharon A, additional, and Holzbaur, Erika LF, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A mutation in the major autophagy gene, WIPI2, associated with global developmental abnormalities
- Author
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Jelani, Musharraf, primary, Dooley, Hannah C., additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Mohamoud, Hussein Sheikh Ali, additional, Khan, Muhammad Tariq Masood, additional, Ali, Zahir, additional, Kang, Changsoo, additional, Rahim, Fazal, additional, Jan, Amin, additional, Vadgama, Nirmal, additional, Khan, Muhammad Ismail, additional, Al-Aama, Jumana Yousuf, additional, Khan, Asifullah, additional, Tooze, Sharon A, additional, and Nasir, Jamal, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Suppression of autophagy during mitosis via CUL4-RING ubiquitin ligases-mediated WIPI2 polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation
- Author
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Lu, Guang, primary, Yi, Juan, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Wang, Ya-Ting, additional, Wu, Yihua, additional, Ren, Yi, additional, Wu, Man, additional, Shi, Yin, additional, Ouyang, Chenxi, additional, Tan, Hayden Weng Siong, additional, Wang, Tianru, additional, Wang, Liming, additional, Yang, Nai-Di, additional, Deng, Shuo, additional, Xia, Dajing, additional, Chen, Ruey-Hwa, additional, Tooze, Sharon A., additional, and Shen, Han-Ming, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A molecular perspective of mammalian autophagosome biogenesis
- Author
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Mercer, Thomas J., primary, Gubas, Andrea, additional, and Tooze, Sharon A., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. PLEKHM1 regulates autophagosome-lysosome fusion through HOPS complex and LC3/GABARAP proteins
- Author
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Hironori Suzuki, Sagar Bhogaraju, Philippe Pierre, Anja Kirchof, Karthik Maddi, David G. McEwan, Diana Miranda de Stegmann, Fraser P. Coxon, Soichi Wakatsuki, Ivan Dikic, Seigo Terawaki, Miep H. Helfrich, Doris Popovic, Evelina Gatti, Andrea Gubas, Christian Behrends, and Daniela Stadel
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Endosome ,GABARAP ,Endocytic cycle ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Autophagy-Related Proteins ,Mice, Transgenic ,Endosomes ,Biology ,Membrane Fusion ,Mice ,Lysosome ,Phagosomes ,medicine ,Autophagy ,Animals ,Humans ,Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Small Interfering ,Molecular Biology ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Signal transducing adaptor protein ,rab7 GTP-Binding Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Transport protein ,Pleckstrin homology domain ,Protein Transport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,rab GTP-Binding Proteins ,Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins ,Lysosomes ,Microtubule-Associated Proteins ,Sequence Alignment ,HeLa Cells ,Protein Binding ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The lysosome is the final destination for degradation of endocytic cargo, plasma membrane constituents, and intracellular components sequestered by macroautophagy. Fusion of endosomes and autophagosomes with the lysosome depends on the GTPase Rab7 and the homotypic fusion and protein sorting (HOPS) complex, but adaptor proteins that link endocytic and autophagy pathways with lysosomes are poorly characterized. Herein, we show that Pleckstrin homology domain containing protein family member 1 (PLEKHM1) directly interacts with HOPS complex and contains a LC3-interacting region (LIR) that mediates its binding to autophagosomal membranes. Depletion of PLEKHM1 blocks lysosomal degradation of endocytic (EGFR) cargo and enhances presentation of MHC class I molecules. Moreover, genetic loss of PLEKHM1 impedes autophagy flux upon mTOR inhibition and PLEKHM1 regulates clearance of protein aggregates in an autophagy- and LIR-dependent manner. PLEKHM1 is thus a multivalent endocytic adaptor involved in the lysosome fusion events controlling selective and nonselective autophagy pathways.
- Published
- 2014
48. Crystal structure of PLEKHM1 LIR-fused human LC3B_2-119
- Author
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Suzuki, H., primary, McEwan, D.G., additional, Popovic, D., additional, Gubas, A., additional, Terawaki, S., additional, Stadel, D., additional, Coxon, F., additional, Stegmann, D.M., additional, Bhogaraju, S., additional, Maddi, K., additional, Kirchhoff, A., additional, Gatti, E., additional, Helfrich, M.H., additional, Behrends, C., additional, Pierre, P., additional, Dikic, I., additional, and Wakatsuki, S., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. PLEKHM1 Regulates Autophagosome-Lysosome Fusion through HOPS Complex and LC3/GABARAP Proteins
- Author
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McEwan, David G., primary, Popovic, Doris, additional, Gubas, Andrea, additional, Terawaki, Seigo, additional, Suzuki, Hironori, additional, Stadel, Daniela, additional, Coxon, Fraser P., additional, Miranda de Stegmann, Diana, additional, Bhogaraju, Sagar, additional, Maddi, Karthik, additional, Kirchof, Anja, additional, Gatti, Evelina, additional, Helfrich, Miep H., additional, Wakatsuki, Soichi, additional, Behrends, Christian, additional, Pierre, Philippe, additional, and Dikic, Ivan, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Efficacy of soft drink filling room wastewater as an energy supplement for beef heifers
- Author
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T.C. Titus, J.M. Gubas, D.L. Cross, and R.R. Kennedy
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Isovalerate ,animal structures ,animal diseases ,General Engineering ,Valerate ,Feed conversion ratio ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Wastewater ,chemistry ,medicine ,Propionate ,Treatment effect ,Food science ,medicine.symptom ,Soft drink ,Weight gain - Abstract
Twelve yearling Angus heifers, averaging 230 kg initially, were used in a randomised design to study the efficacy of soft drink filling room wastewater (SDFRW) as an energy supplement for beef heifers. Heifers were individually penned and fed the same basal ration. The treatments were ad libitum consumption of liquid in the form of (1) water, (2) water and SDFRW and (3) SDFRW. There was no treatment effect on weight gain or feed efficiency. There was no treatment effect on plasma glucose or ruminal acetate, propionate, butyrate, isobutyrate, isovalerate and acetate to propionate ratio. Ruminal valerate was higher for heifers receiving SDFRW only. The SDFRW used in this study was not an efficacious energy supplement for beef heifers. The SDFRW contained a lubricant from canning machinery. It is possible that this lubricant had a deleterious effect on ruminal bacteria, thus contributing to the ineffectiveness of SDFRW as a feed.
- Published
- 1980
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