HaloTag as a substrate-based macroautophagy reporter

Author:

Xiao Qiang12,Cruz Gabrielle123,Botham Rachel12,Fox Susan G.4,Yu Anan4,Allen Seth12,Morimoto Richard I.4ORCID,Kelly Jeffery W.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037

2. The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037

3. Department of Biology, State University of New York College at Fredonia, Fredonia, NY 14063

4. Department of Molecular Biosciences, Rice Institute for Biomedical Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

Abstract

Macroautophagy is a conserved cellular degradation pathway that, upon upregulation, confers resilience toward various stress conditions, including protection against proteotoxicity associated with neurodegenerative diseases, leading to cell survival. Monitoring autophagy regulation in living cells is important to understand its role in physiology and pathology, which remains challenging. Here, we report that when HaloTag is expressed within a cell of interest and reacts with tetramethylrhodamine (TMR; its ligand attached to a fluorophore), the rate of fluorescent TMR-HaloTag conjugate accumulation in autophagosomes and lysosomes, observed by fluorescence microscopy, reflects the rate of autophagy. Notably, we found that TMR-HaloTag conjugates were mainly degraded by the proteasome (~95%) under basal conditions, while lysosomal degradation (~10% upon pharmacological autophagy activation) was slow and incomplete, forming a degraded product that remained fluorescent within a SDS-PAGE gel, in agreement with previous reports that HaloTag is resistant to lysosomal degradation when fused to proteins of interest. Autophagy activation is distinguished from autophagy inhibition by the increased production of the degraded TMR-HaloTag band relative to the full-length TMR-HaloTag band as assessed by SDS-PAGE and by a faster rate of TMR-HaloTag conjugate lysosomal puncta accumulation as observed by fluorescence microscopy. Pharmacological proteasome inhibition leads to accumulation of TMR-HaloTag in lysosomes, indicating possible cross talk between autophagy and proteasomal degradation.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute on Aging

Rainwater Charitable Foundation

JBP Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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