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Antibacterial autophagy occurs at PI(3)P-enriched domains of the endoplasmic reticulum and requires Rab1 GTPase.

Autophagy (2010-10-29)
Ju Huang, Cheryl L Birmingham, Shahab Shahnazari, Jessica Shiu, Yiyu T Zheng, Adam C Smith, Kenneth G Campellone, Won Do Heo, Samantha Gruenheid, Tobias Meyer, Matthew D Welch, Nicholas T Ktistakis, Peter Kijun Kim, Daniel J Klionsky, John H Brumell
RÉSUMÉ

Autophagy mediates the degradation of cytoplasmic components in eukaryotic cells and plays a key role in immunity. The mechanism of autophagosome formation is not clear. Here we examined two potential membrane sources for antibacterial autophagy: the ER and mitochondria. DFCP1, a marker of specialized ER domains known as 'omegasomes,' associated with Salmonella-containing autophagosomes via its PtdIns(3)P and ER-binding domains, while a mitochondrial marker (cytochrome b5-GFP) did not. Rab1 also localized to autophagosomes, and its activity was required for autophagosome formation, clearance of protein aggregates and peroxisomes, and autophagy of Salmonella. Overexpression of Rab1 enhanced antibacterial autophagy. The role of Rab1 in antibacterial autophagy was independent of its role in ER-to-Golgi transport. Our data suggest that antibacterial autophagy occurs at omegasomes and reveal that the Rab1 GTPase plays a crucial role in mammalian autophagy.

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Réactif de transfection GeneJuice®, Non-lipid based chemical transfection reagent optimized for maximum transfection efficiency, ease-of-use, and minimal cytotoxicity on a wide variety of mammalian cells.
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Monoclonal Anti-β-Tubulin antibody produced in mouse, clone TUB 2.1, ascites fluid