U

Usha Nair

Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General Hospital and Lokmanya Tilak Municipal Medical College

Publishes on Autophagy in Disease and Therapy, Cellular transport and secretion, Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease. 27 papers and 8.7k citations.

27Publications
8.7kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Triggers Autophagy
Tomohiro Yorimitsu, Usha Nair, Zhifen Yang et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2006
Cited by 945Open Access

Eukaryotic cells have evolved strategies to respond to stress conditions. For example, autophagy in yeast is primarily a response to the stress of nutrient limitation. Autophagy is a catabolic process for the degradation and recycling of cytosolic, long lived, or aggregated proteins and excess or defective organelles. In this study, we demonstrate a new pathway for the induction of autophagy. In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), accumulation of misfolded proteins causes stress and activates the unfolded protein response to induce the expression of chaperones and proteins involved in the recovery process. ER stress stimulated the assembly of the pre-autophagosomal structure. In addition, autophagosome formation and transport to the vacuole were stimulated in an Atg protein-dependent manner. Finally, Atg1 kinase activity reflects both the nutritional status and autophagic state of the cell; starvation-induced autophagy results in increased Atg1 kinase activity. We found that Atg1 had high kinase activity during ER stress-induced autophagy. Together, these results indicate that ER stress can induce an autophagic response.

Atg8 Controls Phagophore Expansion during Autophagosome Formation
Zhiping Xie, Usha Nair, Daniel J. Klionsky|Molecular Biology of the Cell|2008
Cited by 756Open Access

Autophagy is a potent intracellular degradation process with pivotal roles in health and disease. Atg8, a lipid-conjugated ubiquitin-like protein, is required for the formation of autophagosomes, double-membrane vesicles responsible for the delivery of cytoplasmic material to lysosomes. How and when Atg8 functions in this process, however, is not clear. Here we show that Atg8 controls the expansion of the autophagosome precursor, the phagophore, and give the first real-time, observation-based temporal dissection of the autophagosome formation process. We demonstrate that the amount of Atg8 determines the size of autophagosomes. During autophagosome biogenesis, Atg8 forms an expanding structure and later dissociates from the site of vesicle formation. On the basis of the dynamics of Atg8, we present a multistage model of autophagosome formation. This model provides a foundation for future analyses of the functions and dynamics of known autophagy-related proteins and for screening new genes.

Atg22 Recycles Amino Acids to Link the Degradative and Recycling Functions of Autophagy
Zhifen Yang, Ju Huang, Jiefei Geng et al.|Molecular Biology of the Cell|2006
Cited by 265Open Access

In response to stress conditions (such as nutrient limitation or accumulation of damaged organelles) and certain pathological situations, eukaryotic cells use autophagy as a survival mechanism. During nutrient stress the main purpose of autophagy is to degrade cytoplasmic materials within the lysosome/vacuole lumen and generate an internal nutrient pool that is recycled back to the cytosol. This study elucidates a molecular mechanism for linking the degradative and recycling roles of autophagy. We show that in contrast to published studies, Atg22 is not directly required for the breakdown of autophagic bodies within the lysosome/vacuole. Instead, we demonstrate that Atg22, Avt3, and Avt4 are partially redundant vacuolar effluxers, which mediate the efflux of leucine and other amino acids resulting from autophagic degradation. The release of autophagic amino acids allows the maintenance of protein synthesis and viability during nitrogen starvation. We propose a "recycling" model that includes the efflux of macromolecules from the lysosome/vacuole as the final step of autophagy.

Atg9 Cycles Between Mitochondria and the Pre-Autophagosomal Structure in Yeasts
Cited by 261Open Access

Autophagy is a degradative process conserved among eukaryotic cells. It allows the elimination of cytoplasm including aberrant protein aggregates and damaged organelles. Accordingly, it is implicated in normal developmental processes and also serves a protective role in tumor suppression and elimination of invading pathogens, whereas defects in autophagy are associated with various human diseases including cancer and neurodegeneration. Atg proteins mediate the sequestration event that occurs at the preautophagosomal structure (PAS) by catalyzing the formation of double-membrane vesicles, termed autophagosomes. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the integral membrane protein Atg9 that is required for autophagy cycles through the PAS. Here, we demonstrate that Atg9 shuttles between this location and mitochondria. These data support a new model where mitochondria may provide at least part of the autophagosomal lipids and suggest a novel cellular function for this well-studied organelle.