Litcius/Paper detail

LDO proteins and Vac8 form a vacuole-lipid droplet contact site to enable starvation-induced lipophagy in yeast

Irene Álvarez-Guerra, Emma Block, Filomena Broeskamp, Sonja Gabrijelčič, Terence Infant, Ana de Ory, Lukas Habernig, Claes Andréasson, Tim P. Levine, Johanna L. Höög, Sabrina Büttner

2024Developmental Cell32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lipid droplets (LDs) are fat storage organelles critical for energy and lipid metabolism. Upon nutrient exhaustion, cells consume LDs via gradual lipolysis or via lipophagy, the en bloc uptake of LDs into the vacuole. Here, we show that LDs dock to the vacuolar membrane via a contact site that is required for lipophagy in yeast. The LD-localized LDO proteins carry an intrinsically disordered region that directly binds vacuolar Vac8 to form vCLIP, the vacuolar-LD contact site. Nutrient limitation drives vCLIP formation, and its inactivation blocks lipophagy, resulting in impaired caloric restriction-induced longevity. We establish a functional link between lipophagy and microautophagy of the nucleus, both requiring Vac8 to form respective contact sites upon metabolic stress. In sum, we identify the tethering machinery of vCLIP and find that Vac8 provides a platform for multiple and competing contact sites associated with autophagy.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVacuoleLipid dropletAutophagyCell biologyOrganelleYeastStarvationSaccharomyces cerevisiaeLipolysisBiochemistryCytoplasmAdipose tissueEndocrinologyApoptosisLipid metabolism and biosynthesisPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction