Article
Autophagy in protists
Registro en:
DUSZENKO, Michael; et al. Autophagy in protists. Autophagy, v.7, n.2, p.127-158, Feb. 2011.
1554-8627
1554-8635
Autor
Duszenko, Michael
Ginger, Michael L.
Brennand, Ana
Gualdrón-López, Melisa
Colombo, Maria-Isabel
Coombs, Graham H.
Coppens, Isabelle
Jayabalasingham, Bamini
Langsley, Gordon
Castro, Solange Lisboa de
Menna-Barreto, Rubem
Mottram, Jeremy C.
Navarro, Miguel
Rigden, Daniel J.
Romano, Patricia S.
Stoka, Veronika
Resumen
Autophagy is the degradative process by which eukaryotic
cells digest their own components using acid hydrolases
within the lysosome. Originally thought to function almost
exclusively in providing starving cells with nutrients taken from
their own cellular constituents, autophagy is in fact involved in
numerous cellular events including differentiation, turnover of
macromolecules and organelles and defense against parasitic
invaders. During the past 10–20 years, molecular components
of the autophagic machinery have been discovered, revealing
a complex interactome of proteins and lipids, which, in a
concerted way, induce membrane formation to engulf cellular
material and target it for lysosomal degradation. Here, our
emphasis is autophagy in protists. We discuss experimental
and genomic data indicating that the canonical autophagy
machinery characterized in animals and fungi appeared
prior to the radiation of major eukaryotic lineages. Moreover,
we describe how comparative bioinformatics revealed that
this canonical machinery has been subject to moderation,
outright loss or elaboration on multiple occasions in protist
lineages, most probably as a consequence of diverse lifestyle
adaptations. We also review experimental studies illustrating how several pathogenic protists either utilize autophagy
mechanisms or manipulate host-cell autophagy in order to
establish or maintain infection within a host. The essentiality
of autophagy for the pathogenicity of many parasites, and the
unique features of some of the autophagy-related proteins
involved, suggest possible new targets for drug discovery.
Further studies of the molecular details of autophagy in
protists will undoubtedly enhance our understanding of the
diversity and complexity of this cellular phenomenon and the
opportunities it offers as a drug target. 2030-01-01