Autophagy is an evolutionally conserved "self-eating" process. Although the genes essential for autophagy (termed Atg) have been identified in yeast, the molecular mechanism of how these Atg proteins control autophagosome formation in mammalian cells remains to be elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that Bif-1 (also known as Endophilin B1) interacts with Beclin 1 through UVRAG and acts as a positive mediator of the class III PI3-kinase (PI3KC3). In response to nutrition deprivation, Bif-1 localizes to autophagosomes where it colocalizes with Atg5, as well as LC3. Furthermore, loss of Bif-1 suppresses autophagosome formation. While the SH3 domain of Bif-1 is sufficient for binding to UVRAG, both the BAR and SH3 domains are required for Bif-1 to activate PI3KC3 and induce autophagosome formation. We also found that Bif-1 ablation prolongs cell survival under nutrient starvation. Moreover, knockout of Bif-1 significantly enhances the development of spontaneous tumors in mice. These findings suggest that Bif-1 joins the UVRAG-Beclin 1 complex as a potential activator of autophagy and tumor suppressor.Autophagy is a tightly orchestrated intracellular process for bulk degradation of cytoplasmic proteins or organelles that appears to be essential for many physiological processes such as cellular homeostasis, development, differentiation, tissue remodeling, cell survival and death, innate immunity, and pathogenesis in various organisms 1-4 . The process of autophagic degradation is initiated when a portion of the cytosolic components are sequestered in cupshaped membrane structures called isolation membranes 1, 2, 5, 6 . The isolation membranes are elongated and eventually sealed to become double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes, which are then fused with lysosomes resulting in degradation of the enclosed components. Eighteen autophagy-related (Atg) genes have been characterized in S. cerevisiae and can be categorized into four functional groups: (1) the Atg1 protein kinase complex regulating the induction of autophagy, (2) the class III PI3-kinase (PI3KC3) lipid kinase complex controlling vesicle nucleation, (3) the Atg12-Atg5 and Atg8-phosphatidylethanolamine conjugation pathways for vesicle expansion and completion, and (4) the Atg protein retrieval system 2, 7 . Beclin 1, the mammalian homologue of yeast Atg6, is a key component of the PI3KC3 complex, which plays an essential role in autophagosome formation 8-11 . Although the phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns-3-P) generated by PI3KC3 has been proposed to control membrane dynamics during autophagosome formation 3 , the molecular mechanism underlying this process remains unknown. Results Loss of Bif-1 suppresses caspase-independent cell deathWe have previously reported that Bif-1 localizes to mitochondria and regulates the activation of Bax and Bak during apoptosis induced by intrinsic death stimuli 21 . To examine Bif-1 localization in mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells during serum deprivation, we added a pancaspase inhibitor, z-VAD-fmk, to ...
Serum contains a growth factor derived from platelets and also growth factors derived from platelet-poor plasma. Extracts of heated (1000) human platelets function synergistically with platelet-poor plasma to induce DNA synthesis in quiescent, density-inhibited BALB/c 3T3 cells. Platelet-poor plasma alone did not induce DNA synthesis. Cells exposed to platelet extracts became competent to enter the cell cycle, but the rate of entry into the S phase depended upon the concentration of platelet-poor plasma. The time required for the induction of this competent state was a function of the concentration of the platelet extract. A 2-hr exposure to 100',g of the platelet extract at 370 caused the entire cell population to become competent to enter the S phase. At 40 or 250 the cells did not become competent to synthesize DNA. The platelet extract-induced competent state was stable for at least 13 hr after removal of the platelet extract; however, in the absence of platelet-poor plasma, these competent cells did not progress through the cell cycle. The addition of an optimal concentration of platelet-poor plasma (5%) to these competent cells initiated cell cycle traverse with a ra id, first-order entry of cells into the S phase beginning 12 hr after addition of the plasma. The addition of a suboptimal concentration of the plasma (0.25%) did not increase the rate of cell entry into the S phase. Thus, the induction of DNA synthesis in quiescent BALB/c 3T3 cells can be resolved into at least two phases, controlled by different serum components: (i) competence, induced by the plateletderived growth factor; and (ii) progression of competent cells into the cell cycle, mediated by factors in platelet-poor plasma.The growth of 3T3 cells (1), diploid fibroblasts (2), and smooth muscle cells (3) in vitro is controlled by the concentration of serum in the medium. Serum can be separated into two sets of components which control different cell functions. One set maintains cell viability (4), while the other stimulates replication (5). A heat-stable (1000) cationic growth factor (6) derived from. platelets (7) is released into serum during the clotting process (8, 9). Human serum contains about 770 pg of this polypeptide growth factor per mg of protein, as demonstrated by radioimmunoassay (7). Defibrinogenated platelet-poor plasma, a fraction prepared from unclotted blood, contains only low levels of the growth factor and does not stimulate the replication of diploid fibroblasts or BALB/c 3T3 cells (3, 7-9). Platelet-poor plasma does, however, contain the factors that maintain cell viability (3).The process by which resting cells become committed to enter the growth cycle remains unclear. Smith and Martin (10) have proposed that the commitment of quiescent cells to synthesize DNA is a random event characterized by a first-order rate constant, the transition probability. According to thisThe costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked ...
Quiescent BALB/c 3T3 cells exposed briefly to a platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) become "competent" to replicate their DNA but do not "progress" into S phase unless incubated with growth factors contained in platelet-poor plasma. Plasma from hypophysectomized rats is deficient in progression activity; it does not stimulate PDGF-treated competent cells to synthesize DNA. Addition of somatomedin C to hypophysectomized rat plasma stimulates competent cells to synthesize DNA, demonstrating that somatomedin C is required for progression. Various growth factors were tested for progression activity and competence activity by using BALB/c 3T3 tissue culture assays. Multiplication stimulating activity and other members of the somatomedin family of growth factors are (like somatomedin C) potent mediators of progression. Other mitogenic agents, such as fibroblast growth factor, are (like PDGF) potent inducers of competence. Growth factors with potent progression activity have little or no competence activity and vice versa. In contrast, simian virus 40 provides both competence and progession activity. Coordinate control of BALB/c 3T3 cell growth in vitro by competence factors and somatomedins may be a specific example of a common pattern for growth regulation in animal tissues.
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