4.7 Article

Reduced endosomal microautophagy activity in aging associates with enhanced exocyst-mediated protein secretion

Journal

AGING CELL
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acel.13713

Keywords

aging; autophagy; chaperones; endosomal microautophagy; exocyst complex; late endosomes; protein secretion; proteostasis

Funding

  1. American Federation for Aging Research
  2. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  3. JPB Foundation
  4. National Cancer Institute [CA244780]
  5. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [DK098408]
  6. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [NS095435, NS100717]
  7. National Institute on Aging [AG021904, AG031782, AG054108, AG062359]
  8. National Institute on Aging Intramural Research Program
  9. NIH Office of the Director [1S10OD030286]
  10. Rainwater Charitable Foundation
  11. IRACDA program grant [K12 GM102779]
  12. NIH [T32GM007288, T32HL14445, T32GM007491]
  13. Tisch Cancer Institute NIH Cancer Center [P30-CA196521]

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Autophagy is crucial for protein quality control and regulation, and its dysfunction with age contributes to the loss of proteostasis and the progression of age-related diseases. In this study, we found that the activity of endosomal microautophagy (eMI) declines with age, and identified the specific proteins affected by this decline. Additionally, we discovered that the glycation of Hsc70, a chaperone involved in eMI, reduces its stability and promotes protein secretion. We also identified the exocyst-RalA complex as a novel physiological inhibitor of eMI, which interacts with Hsc70 and affects its activity at the late endosome membrane.
Autophagy is essential for protein quality control and regulation of the functional proteome. Failure of autophagy pathways with age contributes to loss of proteostasis in aged organisms and accelerates the progression of age-related diseases. In this work, we show that activity of endosomal microautophagy (eMI), a selective type of autophagy occurring in late endosomes, declines with age and identify the sub-proteome affected by this loss of function. Proteomics of late endosomes from old mice revealed an aberrant glycation signature for Hsc70, the chaperone responsible for substrate targeting to eMI. Age-related Hsc70 glycation reduces its stability in late endosomes by favoring its organization into high molecular weight protein complexes and promoting its internalization/degradation inside late endosomes. Reduction of eMI with age associates with an increase in protein secretion, as late endosomes can release protein-loaded exosomes upon plasma membrane fusion. Our search for molecular mediators of the eMI/secretion switch identified the exocyst-RalA complex, known for its role in exocytosis, as a novel physiological eMI inhibitor that interacts with Hsc70 and acts directly at the late endosome membrane. This inhibitory function along with the higher exocyst-RalA complex levels detected in late endosomes from old mice could explain, at least in part, reduced eMI activity with age. Interaction of Hsc70 with components of the exocyst-RalA complex places this chaperone in the switch from eMI to secretion. Reduced intracellular degradation in favor of extracellular release of undegraded material with age may be relevant to the spreading of proteotoxicity associated with aging and progression of proteinopathies.

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