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New Toolset of Reporters Reveals That Glycogen Granules Are Neutral Substrates of Bulk Autophagy in Komagataella phaffii.

Authors :
Wijewantha, Nimna V.
Battu, Praneetha
Chen, Kuangcai
Kumar, Ravinder
Nazarko, Taras Y.
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences; Nov2024, Vol. 25 Issue 21, p11772, 18p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Glycogen, a branched polysaccharide organized into glycogen granules (GGs), is delivered from the cytoplasm to the lysosomes of hepatocytes by STBD1-driven selective autophagy (glycophagy). Recently, we developed Komagataella phaffii yeast as a simple model of GG autophagy and found that it proceeds non-selectively under nitrogen starvation conditions. However, another group, using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model, found that glycogen is a non-preferred cargo of nitrogen starvation-induced bulk autophagy. To clarify cargo characteristics of K. phaffii GGs, we used the same glycogen synthase-based reporter (Gsy1-GFP) of GG autophagy in K. phaffii as was used in S. cerevisiae. The K. phaffii Gsy1-GFP marked the GGs and reported on their autophagic degradation during nitrogen starvation, as expected. However, unlike in S. cerevisiae, glycogen synthase-marked GGs were delivered to the vacuole and degraded there with the same efficiency as a cytosolic glycogen synthase in glycogen-deficient cells, suggesting that glycogen is a neutral cargo of bulk autophagy in K. phaffii. We verified our findings with a new set of reporters based on the glycogen-binding CBM20 domain of human STBD1. The GFP-CBM20 and mCherry-CBM20 fusion proteins tagged GGs, reported about the autophagy of GGs, and confirmed that GGs in K. phaffii are neither preferred nor non-preferred substrates of bulk autophagy. They are its neutral substrates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16616596
Volume :
25
Issue :
21
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180780258
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms252111772