Publication | Open Access
VPS37A directs ESCRT recruitment for phagophore closure
124
Citations
40
References
2019
Year
Molecular BiologyCellular PhysiologyCell AutophagySignaling PathwayAutophagyTransport IiiSecretory PathwayAutophagosome CompletionEscrt RecruitmentCell BiologyPhagocyteBiologySignal TransductionMembrane ClosureNatural SciencesPathogenesisIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
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.
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