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Molecular cell
Published

The V-ATPase/ATG16L1 axis is controlled by the V<sub>1</sub>H subunit

Authors

Lewis Timimi, Antoni G Wrobel, George N Chiduza, Sarah L Maslen, Antonio Torres-Méndez, Beatriz Montaner, Colin Davis, Taylor Minckley, Katriona L Hole, Andrea Serio, Michael J Devine, J Mark Skehel, John L Rubinstein, Anne Schreiber, Rupert Beale

Abstract

Mol Cell. 2024 Jul 31:S1097-2765(24)00579-3. doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2024.07.003. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Defects in organellar acidification indicate compromised or infected compartments. Recruitment of the autophagy-related ATG16L1 complex to pathologically neutralized organelles targets ubiquitin-like ATG8 molecules to perturbed membranes. How this process is coupled to proton gradient disruption is unclear. Here, we reveal that the V1H subunit of the vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase) proton pump binds directly to ATG16L1. The V1H/ATG16L1 interaction only occurs within fully assembled V-ATPases, allowing ATG16L1 recruitment to be coupled to increased V-ATPase assembly following organelle neutralization. Cells lacking V1H fail to target ATG8s during influenza infection or after activation of the immune receptor stimulator of interferon genes (STING). We identify a loop within V1H that mediates ATG16L1 binding. A neuronal V1H isoform lacks this loop and is associated with attenuated ATG8 targeting in response to ionophores in primary murine and human iPSC-derived neurons. Thus, V1H controls ATG16L1 recruitment following proton gradient dissipation, suggesting that the V-ATPase acts as a cell-intrinsic damage sensor.

PMID:39089251 | DOI:10.1016/j.molcel.2024.07.003

UK DRI Authors

Andrea Serio

Dr Andrea Serio

Group Leader

Combining bioengineering, imaging, and stem cell modelling to better understand motor neuron disease and dementia

Dr Andrea Serio