Abstract

The yeast vacuole is a vital organelle, which is required for the degradation of aberrant intracellular or extracellular substrates and the recycling of the resulting nutrients as newly available building blocks for the cellular metabolism. Like the plant vacuole or the mammalian lysosome, the yeast vacuole is the destination of biosynthetic trafficking pathways that transport the vacuolar enzymes required for its functions. Moreover, substrates destined for degradation, like extracellular endocytosed cargoes that are transported by endosomes/multivesicular bodies as well as intracellular substrates that are transported via different forms of autophagosomes, have the vacuole as destination. We found that non-selective bulk autophagy of cytosolic proteins as well as the selective autophagic degradation of peroxisomes (pexophagy) and ribosomes (ribophagy) was dependent on the armadillo repeat protein Vac8 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Moreover, we showed that pexophagy and ribophagy depended on the palmitoylation of Vac8. In contrast, we described that Vac8 was not involved in the acidification of the vacuole nor in the targeting and maturation of certain biosynthetic cargoes, like the aspartyl-protease Pep4 (PrA) and the carboxy-peptidase Y (CPY), indicating a role of Vac8 in the uptake of selected cargoes. In addition, we found that the hallmark phenotype of the vac8Δ strain, namely the characteristic appearance of fragmented and clustered vacuoles, depended on the growth conditions. This fusion defect observed in standard glucose medium can be complemented by the replacement with oleic acid or glycerol medium. This complementation of vacuolar morphology also partially restores the degradation of peroxisomes. In summary, we found that Vac8 controlled vacuolar morphology and activity in a context- and cargo-dependent manner.

Highlights

  • Yeast cells contain vacuoles that are functionally comparable to mammalian lysosomes and plant vacuoles [1,2]

  • It has been reported to be required for the inheritance of vacuoles, homotypic vacuole fusion and cytosol-to-vacuole transport (CVT) in

  • We found that Vac8 was required for the bulk autophagy of cytosolic content and that it is essential for the selective autophagic degradation of peroxisomes via pexophagy and the selective autophagic degradation of ribosomes via ribophagy

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Summary

Introduction

Yeast cells contain vacuoles that are functionally comparable to mammalian lysosomes and plant vacuoles [1,2]. The analysis of yeast vacuolar protein sorting mutants has provided general insights into vacuolar membrane traffic and vacuolar biogenesis, which has been a model for organelle inheritance as well as the biosynthetic, endocytic, and autophagic pathways in higher eukaryotes. One of the central factors is Vac, which is linked to several functions, even though its molecular mode of action is not known. Vac is an actin-associated armadillo repeat protein, which is closely related to plakoglobin and beta-catenin of higher Eukaryotes [3,4,5]. Several different tasks were assigned to Vac in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It is required for caffeine resistance, the formation of

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