A New Protein Conjugation System in Human
THE COUNTERPART OF THE YEAST Apg12p CONJUGATION SYSTEM ESSENTIAL FOR AUTOPHAGY*
Abstract
Autophagy is an intracellular process for bulk degradation of cytoplasmic components. We recently found a protein conjugation system essential for autophagy in the yeast,Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The C-terminal glycine of a novel modifier protein, Apg12p, is conjugated to a lysine residue of Apg5p via an isopeptide bond. This conjugation reaction is mediated by Apg7p, a ubiquitin activating enzyme (E1)-like enzyme, and Apg10p, suggesting that it is a ubiquitination-like system (Mizushima, N., Noda, T., Yoshimori, T., Tanaka, Y., Ishii, T., George, M. D., Klionsky, D. J., Ohsumi, M., and Ohsumi, Y. (1998) Nature 395, 395–398). Although autophagy is a ubiquitous process in eukaryotic cells, no molecule involved in autophagy has yet been identified in higher eukaryotes. We reasoned that this conjugation system could be conserved. Here we report cloning and characterization of the human homologue of Apg12 (hApg12). It is a 140-amino acid protein and possesses 27% identity and 48% similarity with the yeast Apg12p, but no apparent homology to ubiquitin. Northern blot analysis showed that its expression was ubiquitous in human tissues. We found that it was covalently attached to another protein. This target protein was identified to be the human Apg5 homologue (hApg5). Mutagenic analyses suggested that this conjugation was formed via an isopeptide bond between the C-terminal glycine of hApg12 and Lys-130 of hApg5. These findings indicate that the Apg12 system is well conserved and may function in autophagy also in human cells.
Footnotes
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↵* This work was supported in part by grants-in-aid for scientific research from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan and the Joint Research Program of the Graduate University for Advanced Studies.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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↵‡ Research fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.
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↵§ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Cell Biology, National Institute for Basic Biology, 38 Nishigonaka, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan. Tel.: 81-564-55-7515; Fax: 81-564-55-7516; E-mail: yohsumi{at}nibb.ac.jp.
- SUMO-1
- small ubiquitin-related modifier-1
- E1
- ubiquitin activating enzyme
- E2
- ubiquitin conjugating enzyme
- UCRP
- ubiquitin cross-reactive protein
- EST
- expressed sequence tag
- PCR
- polymerase chain reaction
- HA
- hemagglutinin
- GFP
- green fluorescent protein
- RACE
- rapid amplification of cDNA ends.
- Received October 1, 1998.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











