NOP53 Suppresses Autophagy through ZKSCAN3-Dependent and -Independent Pathways

2021 
Autophagy is an evolutionally conserved process that recycles aged or damaged intracellular components through a lysosome-dependent pathway. Although this multistep process is propagated in the cytoplasm by the orchestrated activity of the mTOR complex, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and a set of autophagy-related proteins (ATGs), recent investigations have suggested that autophagy is tightly regulated by nuclear events. Thus, it is conceivable that the nucleolus, as a stress-sensing and -responding intranuclear organelle, plays a role in autophagy regulation, but much is unknown concerning the nucleolar controls in autophagy. In this report, we show a novel nucleolar–cytoplasmic axis that regulates the cytoplasmic autophagy process: nucleolar protein NOP53 regulates the autophagic flux through two divergent pathways, the ZKSCAN3-dependent and -independent pathways. In the ZKSCAN3-dependent pathway, NOP53 transcriptionally activates a master autophagy suppressor ZKSCAN3, thereby inhibiting MAP1LC3B/LC3B induction and autophagy propagation. In the ZKSCAN3-independent pathway, NOP53 physically interacts with histone H3 to dephosphorylate S10 of H3, which, in turn, transcriptionally downregulates the ATG7 and ATG12 expressions. Our results identify nucleolar protein NOP53 as an upstream regulator of the autophagy process.
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