The endosomal sorting complex required for transport complex negatively regulates Erg6 degradation under specific glucose restriction conditions.
Ao ZhangYing MengQunli LiYongheng LiangPublished in: Traffic (Copenhagen, Denmark) (2021)
Lipid droplets (LDs) are cytosolic fat storage organelles that play roles in lipid metabolism, trafficking and signaling. Breakdown of LDs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is mainly achieved by lipolysis and lipophagy. In this study, we found that the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) in S. cerevisiae negatively regulated the turnover of a LD marker, Erg6, under both simplified glucose restriction (GR) and acute glucose restriction (AGR) conditions by monitoring the localization and degradation of Erg6. Loss of Vps27, Snf7 or Vps4, representative subunits of the ESCRT machinery, facilitated the delivery of Erg6-GFP to vacuoles and its degradation depending on the lipophagy protein Atg15 under simplified GR. Additionally, the lipolysis proteins Tgl3 and Tgl4 were also involved in the enhanced vacuolar localization and degradation of Erg6-GFP in vps4Δ cells. Furthermore, we found that Atg14, which is required for the formation of putatively liquid-ordered (Lo) membrane domains on the vacuole that act as preferential internalization sites for LDs, abundantly localized to vacuolar membranes in ESCRT mutants. Most importantly, the depletion or overexpression of Atg14 correspondingly abolished or promoted the observed Erg6 degradation in ESCRT mutant cells. We propose that Atg14 together with other proteins promotes Erg6 degradation in ESCRT mutant cells under specific glucose restriction conditions. These results shed new light on the regulation of ESCRT on LD turnover.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- adipose tissue
- blood glucose
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- fatty acid
- signaling pathway
- type diabetes
- cell death
- metabolic syndrome
- liver failure
- bone mineral density
- blood pressure
- ionic liquid
- respiratory failure
- binding protein
- hepatitis b virus
- wild type
- amino acid