[PDF][PDF] Autophagy proteins regulate the secretory component of osteoclastic bone resorption

CJ DeSelm, BC Miller, W Zou, WL Beatty, E van Meel… - Developmental cell, 2011 - cell.com
CJ DeSelm, BC Miller, W Zou, WL Beatty, E van Meel, Y Takahata, J Klumperman, SA Tooze
Developmental cell, 2011cell.com
Osteoclasts resorb bone via the ruffled border, whose complex folds are generated by
secretory lysosome fusion with bone-apposed plasma membrane. Lysosomal fusion with the
plasmalemma results in acidification of the resorptive microenvironment and release of CatK
to digest the organic matrix of bone. The means by which secretory lysosomes are directed
to fuse with the ruffled border are enigmatic. We show that proteins essential for autophagy,
including Atg5, Atg7, Atg4B, and LC3, are important for generating the osteoclast ruffled …
Summary
Osteoclasts resorb bone via the ruffled border, whose complex folds are generated by secretory lysosome fusion with bone-apposed plasma membrane. Lysosomal fusion with the plasmalemma results in acidification of the resorptive microenvironment and release of CatK to digest the organic matrix of bone. The means by which secretory lysosomes are directed to fuse with the ruffled border are enigmatic. We show that proteins essential for autophagy, including Atg5, Atg7, Atg4B, and LC3, are important for generating the osteoclast ruffled border, the secretory function of osteoclasts, and bone resorption in vitro and in vivo. Further, Rab7, which is required for osteoclast function, localizes to the ruffled border in an Atg5-dependent manner. Thus, autophagy proteins participate in polarized secretion of lysosomal contents into the extracellular space by directing lysosomes to fuse with the plasma membrane. These findings are in keeping with a putative link between autophagy genes and human skeletal homeostasis.
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