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Published online 23 October 2000. doi:10.1083/jcb.151.3.519
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525/2000/10/519/ $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 151, Number 3, October 30, 2000 519-528


Original Article

Autophagic Tubes: Vacuolar Invaginations Involved in Lateral Membrane Sorting and Inverse Vesicle Budding

Oliver Müllera, Tanja Sattlera, Matthias Flötenmeyera,b, Heinz Schwarzc, Helmut Plattnerb, and Andreas Mayera
a Friedrich-Miescher-Laboratorium der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
b Fachbereich Biologie, 78457 Konstanz, Germany
c Max-Planck-Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, 72076 Tübingen, Germany

Correspondence to: Andreas Mayer, Friedrich-Miescher-Laboratorium der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Spemannstrasse 37-39, 72076 Tübingen, Germany. Tel:49-7071-601850 Fax:49-7071-601455

Many intracellular compartments of eukaryotic cells do not adopt a spherical shape, which would be expected in the absence of mechanisms organizing their structure. However, little is known about the principles determining the shape of organelles. We have observed very defined structural changes of vacuoles, the lysosome equivalents of yeast. The vacuolar membrane can form a large tubular invagination from which vesicles bud off into the lumen of the organelle. Formation of the tube is regulated via the Apg/Aut pathway. Its lumen is continuous with the cytosol, making this inverse budding reaction equivalent to microautophagocytosis. The tube is highly dynamic, often branched, and defined by a sharp kink of the vacuolar membrane at the site of invagination. The tube is formed by vacuoles in an autonomous fashion. It persists after vacuole isolation and, therefore, is independent of surrounding cytoskeleton. There is a striking lateral heterogeneity along the tube, with a high density of transmembrane particles at the base and a smooth zone devoid of transmembrane particles at the tip where budding occurs. We postulate a lateral sorting mechanism along the tube that mediates a depletion of large transmembrane proteins at the tip and results in the inverse budding of lipid-rich vesicles into the lumen of the organelle.

Key Words: microautophagocytosis, lysosome, yeast, proteolysis, budding


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