Phosphorylation of the Autophagy Receptor Optineurin Restricts <i>Salmonella</i> Growth

Philipp S. Wild(Goethe University Frankfurt), Hesso Farhan(University of Basel), David G. McEwan(Goethe University Frankfurt), Sebastian Wagner(University of Copenhagen), Vladimir V. Rogov(Goethe University Frankfurt), Nathan Brady(German Cancer Research Center), Benjamin Richter(Goethe University Frankfurt), Jelena Korać-Prlić(University of Split), Oliver Waidmann(Goethe University Frankfurt), Chunaram Choudhary(University of Copenhagen), Volker Dötsch(Goethe University Frankfurt), Dirk Bumann(University of Basel), Ivan Đikić(Goethe University Frankfurt)
Science
May 26, 2011
Cited by 1,276

Abstract

Selective autophagy can be mediated via receptor molecules that link specific cargoes to the autophagosomal membranes decorated by ubiquitin-like microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) modifiers. Although several autophagy receptors have been identified, little is known about mechanisms controlling their functions in vivo. In this work, we found that phosphorylation of an autophagy receptor, optineurin, promoted selective autophagy of ubiquitin-coated cytosolic Salmonella enterica. The protein kinase TANK binding kinase 1 (TBK1) phosphorylated optineurin on serine-177, enhancing LC3 binding affinity and autophagic clearance of cytosolic Salmonella. Conversely, ubiquitin- or LC3-binding optineurin mutants and silencing of optineurin or TBK1 impaired Salmonella autophagy, resulting in increased intracellular bacterial proliferation. We propose that phosphorylation of autophagy receptors might be a general mechanism for regulation of cargo-selective autophagy.


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