ATG9 vesicles comprise the seed membrane of mammalian autophagosomes

Author:

Olivas Taryn J.1ORCID,Wu Yumei1234ORCID,Yu Shenliang1ORCID,Luan Lin1ORCID,Choi Peter1ORCID,Guinn Emily D.1ORCID,Nag Shanta1ORCID,De Camilli Pietro V.1234ORCID,Gupta Kallol15ORCID,Melia Thomas J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, Yale University 1 Department of Cell Biology, , New Haven, CT, USA

2. School of Medicine, Yale University 2 Department of Neuroscience, , New Haven, CT, USA

3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, School of Medicine, Yale University 3 , New Haven, CT, USA

4. Program in Cellular Neuroscience Neurodegeneration and Repair, School of Medicine, Yale University 4 , New Haven, CT, USA

5. Nanobiology Institute, Yale University 5 , West Haven, CT, USA

Abstract

As the autophagosome forms, its membrane surface area expands rapidly, while its volume is kept low. Protein-mediated transfer of lipids from another organelle to the autophagosome likely drives this expansion, but as these lipids are only introduced into the cytoplasmic-facing leaflet of the organelle, full membrane growth also requires lipid scramblase activity. ATG9 harbors scramblase activity and is essential to autophagosome formation; however, whether ATG9 is integrated into mammalian autophagosomes remains unclear. Here we show that in the absence of lipid transport, ATG9 vesicles are already competent to collect proteins found on mature autophagosomes, including LC3-II. Further, we use styrene–maleic acid lipid particles to reveal the nanoscale organization of protein on LC3-II membranes; ATG9 and LC3-II are each fully integrated into expanding autophagosomes. The ratios of these two proteins at different stages of maturation demonstrate that ATG9 proteins are not continuously integrated, but rather are present on the seed vesicles only and become diluted in the expanding autophagosome membrane.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

China Scholarship Council

Yale Center for Cellular and Molecular Imaging

Yale Diabetes Research Center

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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