Microbial Cell (Jul 2015)

The role of transcriptional ‘futile cycles’ in autophagy and microbial pathogenesis

  • Guowu Hu,
  • Travis McQuiston,
  • Amélie Bernard,
  • Yoon-Dong Park,
  • Jin Qiu,
  • Ali Vural,
  • Nannan Zhang,
  • Scott R. Waterman,
  • Nathan H. Blewett,
  • Timothy G. Myers,
  • John H. Kehrl,
  • Gulbu Uzel,
  • Daniel J. Klionsky,
  • Peter R. Williamson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15698/mic2015.08.221
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 8
pp. 302 – 304

Abstract

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Eukaryotic cells utilize macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) to recycle cellular materials during nutrient stress. Target of rapamycin (Tor) is a central regulator of this process, acting by post-translational mechanisms, phosphorylating preformed autophagy-related (Atg) proteins to repress autophagy during log-phase growth. We recently reported an additional role for post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy, where by the mRNA decapping protein, Dcp2, undergoes Tor-dependent phosphorylation, resulting in increased ATG mRNA decapping and degradation under nutrient-rich, repressing conditions. Dephosphorylation of Dcp2 during starvation is associated with dissociation of the decapping-ATG mRNA complex, with resultant stabilization of, and accumulation of, ATG transcripts, leading to induction of autophagy. Regulation of mRNA degradation occurs in concert with known mRNA synthetic inductive mechanisms to potentiate overall transcriptional regulation. This mRNA degradative pathway thus constitutes a type of transcriptional ‘futile cycle’ where under nutrient-rich conditions transcript is constantly being generated and degraded. As nutrient levels decline, steady state mRNA levels are increased by both inhibition of degradation as well as increased de novosynthesis. A role for this regulatory process in fungal virulence was further demonstrated by showing that overexpression of the Dcp2-associated mRNA-binding protein Vad1 in the AIDS-associated pathogen Cryptococcus neoformansresults in constitutive repression of autophagy even under starvation conditions as well as attenuated virulence in a mouse model. In summary, Tor-dependent post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy plays a keyrole in the facilitation of microbial pathogenesis.

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