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VPS37A directs ESCRT recruitment for phagophore closure.

Yoshinori TakahashiXinwen LiangTatsuya HattoriZhenyuan TangHaiyan HeHan ChenXiaoming LiuThomas AbrahamYuka Imamura-KawasawaNicholas J BuchkovichMegan M YoungHong-Gang Wang
Published in: The Journal of cell biology (2019)
The process of phagophore closure requires the endosomal sorting complex required for transport III (ESCRT-III) subunit CHMP2A and the AAA ATPase VPS4, but their regulatory mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we establish a FACS-based HaloTag-LC3 autophagosome completion assay to screen a genome-wide CRISPR library and identify the ESCRT-I subunit VPS37A as a critical component for phagophore closure. VPS37A localizes on the phagophore through the N-terminal putative ubiquitin E2 variant domain, which is found to be required for autophagosome completion but dispensable for ESCRT-I complex formation and the degradation of epidermal growth factor receptor in the multivesicular body pathway. Notably, loss of VPS37A abrogates the phagophore recruitment of the ESCRT-I subunit VPS28 and CHMP2A, whereas inhibition of membrane closure by CHMP2A depletion or VPS4 inhibition accumulates VPS37A on the phagophore. These observations suggest that VPS37A coordinates the recruitment of a unique set of ESCRT machinery components for phagophore closure in mammalian cells.
Keyphrases
  • epidermal growth factor receptor
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • high throughput
  • small molecule
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • simultaneous determination
  • tandem mass spectrometry