Cell Discovery (Apr 2024)

ANKFY1 bridges ATG2A-mediated lipid transfer from endosomes to phagophores

  • Bin Wei,
  • Yuhui Fu,
  • Xiuzhi Li,
  • Fang Chen,
  • Yiqing Zhang,
  • Hanmo Chen,
  • Mindan Tong,
  • Linsen Li,
  • Yi Pan,
  • Shen Zhang,
  • She Chen,
  • Xiaoxia Liu,
  • Qing Zhong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41421-024-00659-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Macroautophagy is a process that cells engulf cytosolic materials by autophagosomes and deliver them to lysosomes for degradation. The biogenesis of autophagosomes requires ATG2 as a lipid transfer protein to transport lipids from existing membranes to phagophores. It is generally believed that endoplasmic reticulum is the main source for lipid supply of the forming autophagosomes; whether ATG2 can transfer lipids from other organelles to phagophores remains elusive. In this study, we identified a new ATG2A-binding protein, ANKFY1. Depletion of this endosome-localized protein led to the impaired autophagosome growth and the reduced autophagy flux, which largely phenocopied ATG2A/B depletion. A pool of ANKFY1 co-localized with ATG2A between endosomes and phagophores and depletion of UVRAG, ANKFY1 or ATG2A/B led to reduction of PI3P distribution on phagophores. Purified recombinant ANKFY1 bound to PI3P on membrane through its FYVE domain and enhanced ATG2A-mediated lipid transfer between PI3P-containing liposomes. Therefore, we propose that ANKFY1 recruits ATG2A to PI3P-enriched endosomes and promotes ATG2A-mediated lipid transfer from endosomes to phagophores. This finding implicates a new lipid source for ATG2A-mediated phagophore expansion, where endosomes donate PI3P and other lipids to phagophores via lipid transfer.