Cells communicate with each other through secreting and releasing proteins and vesicles. Many cells can migrate. In this study, we report the discovery of migracytosis, a cell migration-dependent mechanism for releasing cellular contents, and migrasomes, the vesicular structures that mediate migracytosis. As migrating cells move, they leave long tubular strands, called retraction fibers, behind them. Large vesicles, which contain numerous smaller vesicles, grow on the tips and intersections of retraction fibers. These fibers, which connect the vesicles with the main cell body, eventually break, and the vesicles are released into the extracellular space or directly taken up by surrounding cells. Since the formation of these vesicles is migration-dependent, we named them “migrasomes”. We also found that cytosolic contents can be transported into migrasomes and released from the cell through migrasomes. We named this migration-dependent release mechanism “migracytosis”.
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved lysosome-based degradation process. Atg5 plays a very important role in autophagosome formation. Here we show that Atg5 is required for biogenesis of late endosomes and lysosomes in an autophagy-independent manner. In Atg5 cells, but not in other essential autophagy genes defecting cells, recycling and retrieval of late endosomal components from hybrid organelles are impaired, causing persistent hybrid organelles and defective formation of late endosomes and lysosomes. Defective retrieval of late endosomal components from hybrid organelles resulting from impaired recruitment of a component of V1-ATPase to acidic organelles blocks the pH-dependent retrieval of late endosomal components from hybrid organelles. Lowering the intracellular pH restores late endosome/lysosome biogenesis in Atg5 cells.Our data demonstrate an unexpected role of Atg5 and shed new light on late endosome and lysosome biogenesis.
endosome/lysosome biogenesis, atg5, autophagyCitation:
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