4.8 Editorial Material

LC3 conjugation to lipid droplets

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2023.2249390

Keywords

lipid droplets; noncanonical autophagy; LC3B; ATG3; prolonged starvation; membrane contact sites

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Macroautophagy/autophagy and lipid droplet (LD) biology are closely related, with autophagosome-dependent degradation of LDs in response to different signals. LDs play crucial roles in forming autophagosomes by providing lipids and serving as a supportive autophagosome assembly platform. ATG3 localizes to large LDs during prolonged starvation, lipidating LC3B and revealing a non-canonical autophagic role on LDs.
Macroautophagy/autophagy and lipid droplet (LD) biology are intricately linked, with autophagosome-dependent degradation of LDs in response to different signals. LDs play crucial roles in forming autophagosomes possibly by providing essential lipids and serving as a supportive autophagosome assembly platform at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-LD interface. LDs and autophagosomes share common proteins, such as VPS13, ATG2, ZFYVE1/DFCP1, and ATG14, but their dual functions remain poorly understood. In our recent study, we found that prolonged starvation leads to ATG3 localizing to large LDs and lipidating LC3B, revealing a non-canonical autophagic role on LDs. In vitro, ATG3 associates with purified and artificial LDs, and conjugated Atg8-family proteins. In long-term starved cells, only LC3B is found on the specific large LDs, positioned near LC3B-positive membranes that undergo lysosome-mediated acidification. This implies that LD-lipidated LC3B acts as a tethering factor, connecting phagophores to LDs and promoting degradation. Our data also support the notion that certain LD surfaces may function as lipidation stations for LC3B, which may move to nearby sites of autophagosome formation. Overall, our study unveils an unknown non-canonical implication of LDs in autophagy processes.

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