Microautophagy is one the three common forms of autophagic pathway, but unlike macroautophagy and chaperone-mediated autophagy, it is mediated—in mammals by lysosomal action or in plants and fungi by vacuolar action—by direct engulfment of the cytoplasmic cargo. Cytoplasmic material is trapped in the lysosome/vacuole by a random process of membrane invagination. The microautophagic pathway is especially important for survival of cells under conditions of starvation, nitrogen deprivation, or after treatment with rapamycin. Generally a non-selective process, there are three special cases of a selective microautophagic pathway: micropexophagy, piecemeal microautophagy of the nucleus, and micromitophagy, all which are activated only under a specific conditions.
Non-selective microautophagic process can be dissected into 5 distinct steps. Majority of experiments were done on yeast but the molecular principles seem to be more general
Membrane invagination and autophagic tubes formation
is a constitutive process but its frequency is dramatically increased during periods of starvation. Invagination is a tubular process by which is formed the autophagic tube. Formation of the autophagic tubes is mediated through Atg7-dependent ubiquitin-like conjugation or via vacuolar transporter chaperonemolecular complex which acts through calmodulin-dependent manner. Calmodulin involvement in tube formation is calcium independent process.
Vesicle formation
The mechanism of vesicle formation is based on lateral sorting mechanism. Changed composition of membrane molecules leads spontaneous vesicle formation via phase separation mechanism. The process of microautophagic vesicle formation is similar to multivesicular bodies formation process
Vesicle expansion and scission
Enlargement of vesicle is mediated by binding enzymes inside of unclosed vesicle. Basically, this process is reversal to endocytosis. Process follows by pich of the vesicle into the lysosomal/vacuolar lumen. This process is independent on SNARE proteins.
Vesicle degradation and recycling
Vesicle moves freely in the lumen and during the time is degraded by hydrolases. Nutrients are then released by Atg22p.
Selective microautophagy
Process of non-selective microautophagy can be observed in all types of eukaryotic cells. On the other hand, selective microautophagy is commonly observed in yeast cells. Three types of selective microautophagy selective microautophagy can be distinguished: micropexophagy, piecemeal microautophagy of the nucleus and micromitophagy