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ER-to-Lysosome Associated Degradation (ERLAD) in a Nutshell: mammalian, yeast and plant ER-phagy as induced by misfolded proteins.

Mikhail RudinskiyMaurizio Molinari
Published in: FEBS letters (2023)
Conserved catabolic pathways operate to remove aberrant polypeptides from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the major biosynthetic organelle of eukaryotic cells. The best known are the ER-associated degradation (ERAD) pathways that control retro-translocation of terminally misfolded proteins across the ER membrane for clearance by the cytoplasmic ubiquitin/proteasome system. In this review, we catalogue folding-defective mammalian, yeast, and plant proteins that fail to engage ERAD machineries. We describe that they rather segregate in ER subdomains that eventually vesiculate. These ER-derived vesicles are captured by double membrane autophagosomes, engulfed by endolysosomes/vacuoles, or fuse with degradative organelles to clear cells from their toxic cargo. These client-specific, mechanistically diverse ER-phagy pathways are grouped under the umbrella term of ER-to-Lysosome-Associated Degradation (ERLAD) for description in this essay.
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