Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 288, Issue 52, 27 December 2013, Pages 37204-37215
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Molecular Biophysics
Interaction of Bcl-2 with the Autophagy-related GABAA Receptor-associated Protein (GABARAP): BIOPHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND FUNCTIONAL IMPLICATIONS*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.528067Get rights and content
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Apoptosis and autophagy are fundamental homeostatic processes in eukaryotic organisms fulfilling essential roles in development and adaptation. Recently, the anti-apoptotic factor Bcl-2 has been reported to also inhibit autophagy, thus establishing a potential link between these pathways, but the mechanistic details are only beginning to emerge. Here we show that Bcl-2 directly binds to the phagophore-associated protein GABARAP. NMR experiments revealed that the interaction critically depends on a three-residue segment (EWD) of Bcl-2 adjacent to the BH4 region, which is anchored to one of the two hydrophobic pockets on the GABARAP molecule. This is at variance with the majority of GABARAP interaction partners identified previously, which occupy both hydrophobic pockets simultaneously. Bcl-2 affinity could also be detected for GEC1, but not for other mammalian Atg8 homologs. Finally, we provide evidence that overexpression of Bcl-2 inhibits lipidation of GABARAP, a key step in autophagosome formation, possibly via competition with the lipid conjugation machinery. These results support the regulatory role of Bcl-2 in autophagy and define GABARAP as a novel interaction partner involved in this intricate connection.

Apoptosis
Autophagy
Bcl-2
NMR
Protein-Protein Interactions
GABARAP
LC3
Lipidation

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The resulting assignment (covering 126 of 162 residues) has been deposited in the Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank (www.bmrb.wisc.edu) with code 19559.

*

This work was supported by a fellowship of the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) (to P. M.), a fellowship of the International Helmholtz Research School BioSoft (to M. Schwarten), and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Grants Me 1922/9-1 (to A. M.) and Wi 1472/5 (to D. W.).

This article contains supplemental Fig. S1.

1

Both authors contributed equally to this work.

2

Present address: Neurologische Klinik, Universitätsmedizin Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, 55131 Mainz, Germany.