Lipid Droplets and Their Autophagic Turnover via the Raft-Like Vacuolar Microdomains

Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Jul 29;22(15):8144. doi: 10.3390/ijms22158144.

Abstract

Although once perceived as inert structures that merely serve for lipid storage, lipid droplets (LDs) have proven to be the dynamic organelles that hold many cellular functions. The LDs' basic structure of a hydrophobic core consisting of neutral lipids and enclosed in a phospholipid monolayer allows for quick lipid accessibility for intracellular energy and membrane production. Whereas formed at the peripheral and perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum, LDs are degraded either in the cytosol by lipolysis or in the vacuoles/lysosomes by autophagy. Autophagy is a regulated breakdown of dysfunctional, damaged, or surplus cellular components. The selective autophagy of LDs is called lipophagy. Here, we review LDs and their degradation by lipophagy in yeast, which proceeds via the micrometer-scale raft-like lipid domains in the vacuolar membrane. These vacuolar microdomains form during nutrient deprivation and facilitate internalization of LDs via the vacuolar membrane invagination and scission. The resultant intra-vacuolar autophagic bodies with LDs inside are broken down by vacuolar lipases and proteases. This type of lipophagy is called microlipophagy as it resembles microautophagy, the type of autophagy when substrates are sequestered right at the surface of a lytic compartment. Yeast microlipophagy via the raft-like vacuolar microdomains is a great model system to study the role of lipid domains in microautophagic pathways.

Keywords: autophagy; lipid droplets; lipid rafts; lipophagy; microautophagy; microlipophagy; organelle homeostasis; vacuolar microdomains; vacuole; yeast.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Autophagy / physiology*
  • Cytosol / metabolism
  • Endoplasmic Reticulum / metabolism
  • Homeostasis / physiology
  • Lipid Droplets / metabolism*
  • Lipolysis / physiology
  • Lysosomes / metabolism
  • Membrane Microdomains / metabolism*
  • Phospholipids / metabolism
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae / metabolism*
  • Vacuoles / metabolism*

Substances

  • Phospholipids