4.8 Article

A conserved mechanism of TOR-dependent RCK-mediated mRNA degradation regulates autophagy

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NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
卷 17, 期 7, 页码 930-942

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/ncb3189

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  1. University of Michigan, National Institutes of Health [GM088565]
  2. Intramural Research Program of the NIH, NIAID, NICHD
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM053396]

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Autophagy is an essential eukaryotic pathway requiring tight regulation to maintain homeostasis and preclude disease. Using yeast and mammalian cells, we report a conserved mechanism of autophagy regulation by RNA helicase RCK family members in association with the decapping enzyme Dcp2. Under nutrient-replete conditions, Dcp2 undergoes TOR-dependent phosphorylation and associates with RCK members to form a complex with autophagy-related (ATG) mRNA transcripts, leading to decapping, degradation and autophagy suppression. Simultaneous with the induction of ATG mRNA synthesis, starvation reverses the process, facilitating ATG mRNA accumulation and autophagy induction. This conserved post-transcriptional mechanism modulates fungal virulence and the mammalian inflammasome, the latter providing mechanistic insight into autoimmunity reported in a patient with a PIK3CD/p110 delta gain-of-function mutation. We propose a dynamic model wherein RCK family members, in conjunction with Dcp2, function in controlling ATG mRNA stability to govern autophagy, which in turn modulates vital cellular processes affecting inflammation and microbial pathogenesis.

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