4.8 Article

Selective autophagic degradation of maternally-loaded germline P granule components in somatic cells during C. elegans embryogenesis

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 717-719

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/auto.5.5.8552

Keywords

autophagy; P granule; bec-1; vps-34; sepa-1; C. elegans

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Funding

  1. National High Technology Projects 863 [2008AA022306]

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Germline P granules are specialized protein/RNA aggregates that are found exclusively in germ cells in C elegans. During the early embryonic divisions that generate germ blastomeres, aggregate-prone P granule components PGL-1 and PGL-3 that remain in the cytoplasm destined for somatic daughters are selectively removed by autophagy. Loss-of-function of components of the autophagy pathway, including the VPS-34/BEC-1 complex, causes accumulation of PGL-1 and PGL-3 into aggregates in somatic cells (termed PGL granules). Formation of PGL granules depends on SEPA-1, which is an integral component of these granules. SEPA-1 is preferentially degraded by autophagy and is also required for the autophagic degradation of PGL-1 and PGL-3. SEPA-1 functions as a bridging molecule in mediating degradation of P granule components by directly interacting with PGL-3 and also with the autophagy protein LGG-1/Atg8. The defect in embryonic development in autophagy mutants is suppressed by mutation of sepa-1, suggesting that autophagic degradation of PGL granule components may provide nutrients for embryogenesis and/or also prevent the formation of aggregates that could be toxic for animal development. Our study reveals a specific physiological function of selective autophagic degradation during C elegans development.

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