Abstract

Autophagy is the primary catabolic cellular degradation process, which generates nutrients and energy to maintain essential cellular activities upon nutrient starvation. The regulation of autophagy is central to the understanding of its mechanisms; post-translational modifications account for the rapid kinetics that control autophagy induction. A recent paper of ours provided 2 important insights into the upstream regulation of autophagy signaling. The pro-autophagic factor AMBRA1 is a key link between the ULK1 and the BECLIN 1 complexes1; in fact, by phosphorylating AMBRA1, the kinase ULK1 is able to regulate the localization of the BECLIN 1 complex to the omegasome, an ER site for autophagosome formation. Indeed, we discovered that an intense cross-talk exists between ULK1 and BECLIN 1 complexes long before their hierarchical localization at the omegasome triggers autophagy induction. In fact, AMBRA1 is able to regulate ULK1 stability and kinase activity by promoting a regulative ubiquitylation on ULK1 by K63-linked ubiquitin chains.2 This modification is mediated by the E3 ligase TRAF6, an AMBRA1-ULK1-interacting protein, upon autophagy induction by starvation or after rapamycin (an mTOR inhibitor) administration. Subsequently, we identified two TRAF6-binding sites (P-X-E-X-X-aromatic/acidic) on AMBRA1; by generating an AMBRA1 mutant construct (AMBRA1AA) unable to bind TRAF6, we determined the functional significance of their interaction in autophagy induction and in ULK1 stability and activity. Prompted by this finding, we set out to investigate how this modification could affect ULK1 functions. We found that ULK1, like many other kinases, is able to self-associate during autophagy, and that the AMBRA1-TRAF6 binding proves essential for its self-association. Overall, our results suggest that, by this positive feedback loop, AMBRA1 helps fine-tune the autophagic response by enhancing ULK1 signaling capacities. A key question remains as to whether ULK1 phosphorylation on AMBRA1 takes place before or after AMBRA1-TRAF6 regulatory function on ULK1. More generally, these results raise an important question about how AMBRA1 is regulated during the initial steps of autophagy. In this work, we also identified AMBRA1 as a novel mTORC1 substrate; in the light of this, we propose a novel inhibitory mechanism on autophagy induction. As is already known, mTORC1 has a fundamental role in coordinating anabolic and catabolic processes and acts as a signal integrator, combining regulatory inputs from nutrients, growth factors, energy levels, and stress signals.3 The fact that mTORC1 deregulation is associated with several human diseases highlights its importance in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis. Protein synthesis is by far the best-characterized process controlled by mTORC1. This kinase directly phosphorylates 4E-BP1 and the S6K1 kinase 1, which, in turn, both promote protein synthesis.4 In addition, mTORC1 promotes growth by negatively regulating autophagy through several mechanisms. In non-starving cells, mTORC1 suppresses the formation of the phagophore (the phagophore believed to prime autophagosome nucleation) by phosphorylating and inhibiting ULK1 and its interacting partner, ATG13.5 Moreover, mTORC1 regulates DAP1, a suppressor of autophagy,6 and, furthermore, in a recent analysis of the mTOR-dependent phospho-proteome, WIPI2, a mammalian ortholog of Atg18, emerged as a potential mTOR effector.7 Yet mTOR does not seem to be an errant kinase that catches its targets in the cytosol. Rather, the presence of mTORC1 at the vacuole/lysosome has recently provided important implications for its ability to control autophagy. Amino acids regulate the recruitment of mTORC1 to the lysosomal surface, where mTORC1 is activated. There, mTORC1 phosphorylates the transcriptional factor TFEB; this event prevents TFEB from entering the nucleus and activating a catabolic transcriptional program.8 Besides these regulatory events, we found that, in non-starving cells, mTORC1 complex phosphorylates AMBRA1 at Ser52 by inhibiting AMBRA1 pro-autophagic effects.2 AMBRA1 is thus one of the few known functional targets of mTOR and one of the more upstream autophagy signalers. To verify the importance of this phosphorylation on autophagy, we generated phospho-silencing and phospho-mimicking mutant constructs; these, we discovered, were able to modulate autophagy induction. By using these 2 constructs, we have subsequently demonstrated that mTOR exerts a further brake on autophagy, by directly phosphorylating AMBRA1, thereby inhibiting its action on ULK1. The orchestration of this signaling is conducted, therefore, by an effective teamwork, in which all members are reciprocally regulated by means of both positive and negative feedback loops (Fig. 1). Manipulation of autophagy regulation or of autophagy gene expression and function is of the highest importance in biomedicine. Autophagy deregulation is related to many human diseases, and its manipulation may have the potential to improve patients’ condition. In fact, the generation of synthetic peptides or specific drugs that target specific mTOR target sites could be used to develop therapies involving up- or downregulation of autophagy. Figure 1. mTORC1 mediated-signaling during nutrient-rich and nutrient-starvation conditions. (A) In nutrient-rich conditions, mTORC1 phosphorylates S6K1 and 4E-BP1, which regulate cell growth and protein translation. In addition, mTORC1 mediated-phosphorylation ...

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