articleAutophagyJul 5, 2005Closed access

Lysosomal Turnover, but Not a Cellular Level, of Endogenous LC3 is a Marker for Autophagy

Juntendo University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

During starvation-induced autophagy in mammals, autophagosomes form and fuse with lysosomes, leading to the degradation of the intra-autophagosomal contents by lysosomal proteases. During the formation of autophagosomes, LC3 is lipidated, and this LC3-phospholipid conjugate (LC3-II) is localized on autophagosomes and autolysosomes. While intra-autophagosomal LC3-II may be degraded by lysosomal hydrolases, recent studies have regarded LC3-II accumulation as marker of autophagy. The effect of lysosomal turnover of endogenous LC3-II in this process, however, has not been considered. We therefore investigated the lysosomal turnover of endogenous LC3-II during starvation-induced autophagy using E64d and pepstatin…

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Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Autophagy
  • Biology
  • Endogeny
  • Cell biology
  • Cellular Aging
  • Protein turnover
  • Lysosome
  • TFEB
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