Autophagy as a stress-response and quality-control mechanism: implications for cell injury and human disease

L Murrow, J Debnath - Annual Review of Pathology …, 2013 - annualreviews.org
Annual Review of Pathology: Mechanisms of Disease, 2013annualreviews.org
Autophagy, a vital catabolic process that degrades cytoplasmic components within the
lysosome, is an essential cytoprotective response to pathologic stresses that occur during
diseases such as cancer, ischemia, and infection. In addition to its role as a stress-response
pathway, autophagy plays an essential quality-control function in the cell by promoting basal
turnover of long-lived proteins and organelles, as well as by selectively degrading damaged
cellular components. This homeostatic function protects against a wide variety of diseases …
Autophagy, a vital catabolic process that degrades cytoplasmic components within the lysosome, is an essential cytoprotective response to pathologic stresses that occur during diseases such as cancer, ischemia, and infection. In addition to its role as a stress-response pathway, autophagy plays an essential quality-control function in the cell by promoting basal turnover of long-lived proteins and organelles, as well as by selectively degrading damaged cellular components. This homeostatic function protects against a wide variety of diseases, including neurodegeneration, myopathy, liver disease, and diabetes. This review discusses our current understanding of these two principal functions of autophagy and describes in detail how alterations in autophagy promote human disease.
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