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Research Paper

Structure-Function Relationship of Atg12, a Ubiquitin-Like Modifier Essential for Autophagy

Takao Hanada and Yoshinori Ohsumi

volume 1 | issue 2

July/August/September
Pages: 110 - 118

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Atg12, a post-translational modifier, is activated and conjugated to Atg5 by a ubiquitin-like conjugation system, though it has no obvious sequence homology to ubiquitin. The Atg12-Atg5 conjugate is essential for autophagy, an intracellular bulk degradation process. Here, we show that the carboxyl-terminal region of Atg12 that is predicted to fold into a ubiquitin-like structure is necessary and sufficient for both conjugation and autophagy, which indicates that the domain essential for autophagy resides in the ubiquitin-fold region. We further show that two hydrophobic residues within the ubiquitin-fold region are important for autophagy: mutation at Y149 affects conjugate formation catalyzed by Atg10, an E2-like enzyme, while mutation at F154 has no effect on Atg12-Atg5 conjugate formation but its hydrophobic nature is essential for autophagy. In response to the F154 mutation, Atg8-PE conjugation, the other ubiquitin-like conjugation in autophagy, is severely reduced and autophagosome formation fails. Gel filtration analysis suggests that F154 plays a critical role in the assembly of a functional Atg12-Atg5?Atg16 complex that is requisite for autophagosome formation.



We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.