A lysosome () is a membrane-bound organelle that is found in all mammalian cells, with the exception of red blood cells (erythrocytes).
With an acidic lumen limited by a single-bilayer lipid membrane, the lysosome holds an environment isolated from the rest of the cell. The lower pH creates optimal conditions for the over 60 different Hydrolase inside.
Lysosomes receive extracellular particles through endocytosis, and intracellular components through autophagy. They can also fuse with the plasma membrane and secrete their contents, a process called lysosomal exocytosis. After degradation lysosomal products are transported out of the lysosome through specific membrane proteins or via vesicular membrane trafficking to be recycled or to be utilized for energy.
Aside from cellular clearance and secretion, lysosomes mediate biological processes like plasma membrane repair, cell homeostasis, energy metabolism, cell signaling, and the immune response.
Using differential centrifugation and enzyme activity assays, the team confirmed the hypothesis and understood that these organelles play a crucial role in intracellular digestion processes, such as phagocytosis and autophagy. The presence of digestive enzymes was further validated using electron microscopy. De Duve's discovery laid the foundation for new research into lysosomal functions and understanding disorders which could lead to undigested materials accumulating in the cell. De Duve was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974.
Lysosomes contain a variety of enzymes that enable the cell to break down various biomolecules it engulfs, including Peptide, Nucleic acid, Carbohydrate, and Lipid. The enzymes responsible for this hydrolysis require an acidic environment for optimal activity, with a pH ranging from ~4.5–5.0. The interior of the lysosome is acidic compared to the slightly basic cytosol (pH 7.2).
The lysosomal membrane is a phospholipid bilayer with high carbohydrate content from heavily glycosylated membrane proteins. This forms a glycocalyx that protects the cell from the degradative enzymes held within the lysosome. Lysosomal hydrolases are pH-sensitive and do not function properly in the alkaline environment of the cytosol, ensuring that molecules and organelles in the cytosol are not degraded if there is leakage of hydrolytic enzymes from the lysosome.
In addition to breaking down polymers, lysosomes are capable of killing and digesting microbes, cells, or cellular debris. Through cooperation with Phagosome, lysosomes conduct autophagy, clearing out damaged structures and forming simple compounds, which are then used as new building materials. Similarly, lysosomes break down virus particles or bacteria during phagocytosis in macrophages.
Lysosomes also help detect pathogens through toll-like receptors (TLRs), like TLR7 and TLR9. Microbes can be degraded into antigens, which are then loaded onto MHC molecules and presented to T-cells, a critical part of immune defense. Additionally, lysosomal enzymes can trigger lysosomal-mediated programmed cell death (LM-PCD) if released into the cytoplasm.
To maintain their acidic environment, lysosomes pump protons (H⁺ ions) from the cytosol into the lysosomal lumen via a proton pump in the lysosomal membrane. V-ATPase are responsible for the transport of protons, while the counter transport of chloride ions is performed by ClC-7 Cl⁻/H⁺ antiporter. This mechanism helps maintain a steady acidic environment, as well as ionic homeostasis, within the lysosome.
Lysosomes also help balance cellular metabolism by sensing nutrient availability. When nutrients are plentiful, they activate mTOR signaling to support anabolic (biosynthetic) processes. During starvation, lysosomes degrade autophagic material, recycling components to maintain cell survival.
Endocytosed materials – such as complex lipids, membrane proteins, and polysaccharides – enter the endocytic pathway; moving first in early endosomes, then in late endosomes containing intraluminal vesicles (also referred to as multivesicular bodies, MVBs). Then they interact with lysosomes, either via full fusion, or via "kiss-and-run" events where brief membrane contact allows content exchange before the organelles separate. The resulting hybrid structure is called an endolysosome.
Intracellular materials – like damaged organelles or misfolded proteins – are processed through the autophagic pathway. Autophagy, or "self-eating," is a continuous cellular process that delivers cytosolic components to lysosomes for degradation. There are three main types of autophagy: macroautophagy, microautophagy, and chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA)—each differing in how cargo is delivered to the lysosome. After merging with lysosomes they create hybrid organelles called autolysosomes.
The resulting catabolites serve as building-block molecules for synthesizing complex macromolecules. These are exported from lysosomes via specific transporters or through vesicle trafficking. Once released into the cytosol or delivered to the Golgi apparatus, these catabolites are either further metabolized to generate energy or reused in biosynthetic pathways to form new complex molecules. Alternatively, some degradation products can be secreted out of the lysosomes through exocytosis.
Because catabolic (degradative) and anabolic (biosynthetic) pathways are interconnected and tightly regulated, the flow of cargo through the endocytic and autophagic systems is modulated by cellular signaling and nutrient availability. Nutrient deprivation, for example, activates autophagy, which is then halted once lysosomal degradation is complete. Lysosomes themselves play a direct role in sensing nutrient levels through the lysosomal nutrient-sensing (LYNUS) system, which includes components such as V-ATPase, Rag GTPases, and the mTOR complex.
Early endosomes degrade cargo from the extracellular environment, and as they mature into late endosomes, proton pumps are activated, causing the internal environment to become acidic. This acidic environment activates the hydrolytic enzymes, which further mature the endosome into a lysosome. The lysosome then breaks down and recycles cellular waste.
Disruptions in lysosomal formation can lead to dysfunctional lysosomes and the accumulation of undigested molecules, contributing to various lysosomal storage disorders.
Lysosomes also play a big role in the adaptive immune system. Fragments of pathogens that have been broken down by phagolysosomes are sent to the major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) and presented on the surface of antigen presenting cells (APCs). This then activates helper T cells, which causes an adaptive immune response.
Just like other pathogens, viruses entering the cell via endocytosis are degraded in lysosomes. However, some viruses have evolved strategies to escape degradation by lysosomes, and are able to escape the lysosome before complete degradation and spread viral material into the cytoplasm which then spreads viral infection in the cell. Poor lysosomal activity and failure by lysosomes to properly degrade all biomolecules from pathogens results in higher viral infections by viruses such as HIV.
The stress of accumulated lysosomal substrates can lead to lysosomal membrane permeabilization, allowing hydrolytic enzymes to leak into the cytosol and initiate cell death. This cell loss particularly affects post-mitotic tissues such as the brain, liver, eyes, muscles, and spleen—resulting in the hallmark symptoms of lysosomal storage disorders, including neurodegeneration, cognitive impairment, and motor dysfunction.
The age of onset and the specific symptoms in lysosomal storage disorders differ depending on the severity of the mutations, the cell types affected and what substrates accumulate. However, the clinical presentation is typically a neurodegenerative disease at childhood, with more variations presenting themselves in adulthood. In most cases, the central nervous system (CNS) is affected, causing the brain to experience global neurodegeneration, inflammation, activation of the innate immune system and astrogliosis.
Several therapeutic strategies have been developed to address lysosomal storage disorders. These include substrate reduction therapy, bone marrow transplantation, gene therapy, and enzyme replacement therapy. Currently, enzyme replacement therapy and substrate reduction are the most widely used. However, despite these advancements, most lysosomal storage disorders still lack effective treatments as the existing ones are limited by poor efficacy and are typically disease specific.
Many approved drugs, including haloperidol, levomepromazine, and amantadine, exhibit lysosomotropic behavior. This helps explain their high tissue-to-blood concentration ratios and prolonged tissue retention, though fat solubility also contributes.
Some lysosomotropic drugs can interfere with lysosomal enzymes like acid sphingomyelinase. Ambroxol, a mucolytic, promotes lysosomal exocytosis by neutralizing lysosomal pH and releasing stored calcium. This action may underlie its observed benefits in diseases linked to lysosomal dysfunction, including Parkinson's disease and lysosomal storage disorders.
Discovery
Function and structure
Lysosomal degradation pathways
Formation
Pathogen entry
Clinical significance
Lysosomotropism
Systemic lupus erythematosus (Lupus)
Different types of enzymes present in lysosomes
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!Sr. No
!Enzymes
!Substrate 1 Protease Proteins and Peptides (breaks peptide bonds) 2 Nuclease DNA and RNA (cleaves phosphodiester bonds) 3 Glycosidases Carbohydrates (breaks glycosidic bonds) 4 Lipase Lipids (breaks ester bonds) 5 Phospholipase Phospholipids (cleaves fatty acids from phospholipids) 7 Phosphatase Phosphorylated molecules (removes phosphate groups) 8 Sulfatase Sulfated molecules (removes sulphate groups)
See also
External links
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