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Atg8 family proteins LIR AIM motifs and other interaction modes.pdf (4.59 MB)

Atg8 family proteins, LIR/AIM motifs and other interaction modes.

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posted on 2024-01-15, 14:30 authored by Vladimir V Rogov, Ioannis P Nezis, Panagiotis Tsapras, Hong Zhang, Yasin Dagdas, Nobuo N Noda, Hitoshi Nakatogawa, Martina Wirth, Stephane Mouilleron, David G McEwan, Christian Behrends, Vojo Deretic, Zvulun Elazar, Sharon A Tooze, Ivan Dikic, Trond Lamark, Terje Johansen
The Atg8 family of ubiquitin-like proteins play pivotal roles in autophagy and other processes involving vesicle fusion and transport where the lysosome/vacuole is the end station. Nuclear roles of Atg8 proteins are also emerging. Here, we review the structural and functional features of Atg8 family proteins and their protein-protein interaction modes in model organisms such as yeast, Arabidopsis, C. elegans and Drosophila to humans. Although varying in number of homologs, from one in yeast to seven in humans, and more than ten in some plants, there is a strong evolutionary conservation of structural features and interaction modes. The most prominent interaction mode is between the LC3 interacting region (LIR), also called Atg8 interacting motif (AIM), binding to the LIR docking site (LDS) in Atg8 homologs. There are variants of these motifs like "half-LIRs" and helical LIRs. We discuss details of the binding modes and how selectivity is achieved as well as the role of multivalent LIR-LDS interactions in selective autophagy. A number of LIR-LDS interactions are known to be regulated by phosphorylation. New methods to predict LIR motifs in proteins have emerged that will aid in discovery and analyses. There are also other interaction surfaces than the LDS becoming known where we presently lack detailed structural information, like the N-terminal arm region and the UIM-docking site (UDS). More interaction modes are likely to be discovered in future studies.

Funding

Crick (Grant ID: CC2134, Grant title: Tooze CC2134) Crick (Grant ID: CC1068, Grant title: STP Structural Biology)

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