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  5. Differential Involvement of Atg16L1 in Crohn Disease and Canonical Autophagy

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Article
English
2009

Differential Involvement of Atg16L1 in Crohn Disease and Canonical Autophagy

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English
2009
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Vol 284 (47)
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m109.037671

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Akira Shizuo
Akira Shizuo

Osaka University

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Naonobu Fujita
Tatsuya Saitoh
Shun Kageyama
+3 more

Abstract

A single nucleotide polymorphism in Atg16L1, an autophagy-related gene (ATG), is a risk factor for Crohn disease, a major form of chronic inflammatory bowel disease. However, it is still unknown how the Atg16L1 variant contributes to disease development. The Atg16L1 protein possesses a C-terminal WD repeat domain whose function is entirely unknown, and the Crohn disease-associated mutation (T300A) is within this domain. To elucidate the function of the WD repeat domain, we established an experimental system in which a WD repeat domain mutant of Atg16L1 is stably expressed in Atg16L1-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Using the system, we show that the Atg16L1 complex forms a dimeric complex and that the total Atg16L1 protein level is strictly maintained, possibly by the ubiquitin proteasome system. Furthermore, we show that an Atg16L1 WD repeat domain deletion and the T300A mutant have little impact on canonical autophagy and autophagy against Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. Therefore, we propose that Atg16L1 T300A is differentially involved in Crohn disease and canonical autophagy.

How to cite this publication

Naonobu Fujita, Tatsuya Saitoh, Shun Kageyama, Akira Shizuo, Takeshi Noda, Tamotsu Yoshimori (2009). Differential Involvement of Atg16L1 in Crohn Disease and Canonical Autophagy. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(47), pp. 32602-32609, DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m109.037671.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2009

Authors

6

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Journal of Biological Chemistry

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m109.037671

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