4.8 Article

Evolutionary trends and functional anatomy of the human expanded autophagy network

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 1652-1667

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2015.1059558

Keywords

autophagy; CDC42; Cytoscape; evolution; network biology; systems biology

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH P50 through San Diego Center for Systems Biology (SDCSB) [GM085764]
  2. German Research Association (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG) [Ti 640 1-1, Ti 640 2-1, GM069373]
  3. German Excellence Initiative Inflammation at Interfaces
  4. Lichtenberg program of the VW foundation
  5. Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany (BMBF, VIP initiative) [FKZ 03V0785]
  6. National Resource for Network Biology [P41 GM103504]
  7. San Diego Center for Systems Biology [P50 GM085764]
  8. National Institutes of Health [AI085087, DK077704, DK08379]

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All eukaryotic cells utilize autophagy for protein and organelle turnover, thus assuring subcellular quality control, homeostasis, and survival. In order to address recent advances in identification of human autophagy associated genes, and to describe autophagy on a system-wide level, we established an autophagy-centered gene interaction network by merging various primary data sets and by retrieving respective interaction data. The resulting network (AXAN') was analyzed with respect to subnetworks, e.g. the prime gene subnetwork (including the core machinery, signaling pathways and autophagy receptors) and the transcription subnetwork. To describe aspects of evolution within this network, we assessed the presence of protein orthologs across 99 eukaryotic model organisms. We visualized evolutionary trends for prime gene categories and evolutionary tracks for selected AXAN genes. This analysis confirms the eukaryotic origin of autophagy core genes while it points to a diverse evolutionary history of autophagy receptors. Next, we used module identification to describe the functional anatomy of the network at the level of pathway modules. In addition to obvious pathways (e.g., lysosomal degradation, insulin signaling) our data unveil the existence of context-related modules such as Rho GTPase signaling. Last, we used a tripartite, image-based RNAi - screen to test candidate genes predicted to play a role in regulation of autophagy. We verified the Rho GTPase, CDC42, as a novel regulator of autophagy-related signaling. This study emphasizes the applicability of system-wide approaches to gain novel insights into a complex biological process and to describe the human autophagy pathway at a hitherto unprecedented level of detail.

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