4.8 Article

The PI 3-kinase regulator Vps15 is required for autophagic clearance of protein aggregates

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 500-506

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/auto.5829

Keywords

aggregate; autophagy; Drosophila; p62; PI 3-kinase; sequestosome

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Autophagy is involved in cellular clearance of aggregate-prone proteins, thereby having a cytoprotective function. Studies in yeast have shown that the PI 3-kinase Vps34 and its regulatory protein kinase Vps 15 are important for autophagy, but the possible involvement of these proteins in autophagy in a multicellular animal has not been addressed genetically. Here, we have created a Drosophila deletion mutant of vps15 and studied its role in autophagy and aggregate clearance. Homozygous Delta vps15 Drosophila died at the early L3 larval stage. Using GFP-Atg8a as an autophagic marker, we employed fluorescence microscopy to demonstrate that fat bodies of wild type Drosophila larvae accumulated autophagic structures upon starvation whereas Avpsl5 fat bodies showed no such response. Likewise, electron microscopy revealed starvation-induced autophagy in gut cells from wild type but not Delta vps15 larvae. Fluorescence microscopy showed that Avpsl5 mutant tissues accumulated profiles that were positive for ubiquitin and Ref(2)P, the Drosophila homolog of the sequestosome marker SQSTM1/p62. Biochemical fractionation and Western blotting showed that these structures were partially detergent insoluble, and immuno-electron microscopy further demonstrated the presence of Ref(2)P positive membrane free protein aggregates. These results provide the first genetic evidence for a funtion of Vps 15 in autophagy in multicellular organisms and suggest that the Vps 15-containing PI 3-kinase complex may play an important role in clearance of protein aggregates.

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