4.8 Article

Termination of autophagy and reformation of lysosomes regulated by mTOR

Journal

NATURE
Volume 465, Issue 7300, Pages 942-U11

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09076

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Division of Intramural Research of the NIAID, NIH, Department of Health and Human Services
  2. NIH [GM079431]
  3. 973 program [2010CB833704]
  4. NSF [20091300700]
  5. Tsinghua University [20091081391]
  6. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [918.56.611]

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Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved process by which cytoplasmic proteins and organelles are catabolized(1,2). During starvation, the protein TOR (target of rapamycin), a nutrient-responsive kinase, is inhibited, and this induces autophagy. In autophagy, double-membrane autophagosomes envelop and sequester intracellular components and then fuse with lysosomes to form autolysosomes, which degrade their contents to regenerate nutrients. Current models of autophagy terminate with the degradation of the autophagosome cargo in autolysosomes(3-5), but the regulation of autophagy in response to nutrients and the subsequent fate of the autolysosome are poorly understood. Here we show that mTOR signalling in rat kidney cells is inhibited during initiation of autophagy, but reactivated by prolonged starvation. Reactivation of mTOR is autophagy-dependent and requires the degradation of autolysosomal products. Increased mTOR activity attenuates autophagy and generates proto-lysosomal tubules and vesicles that extrude from autolysosomes and ultimately mature into functional lysosomes, thereby restoring the full complement of lysosomes in the cell-a process we identify in multiple animal species. Thus, an evolutionarily conserved cycle in autophagy governs nutrient sensing and lysosome homeostasis during starvation.

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