Autophagy, a lysosomal process involved in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis, is responsible for the turnover of long-lived proteins and organelles that are either damaged or functionally redundant. The process is tightly controlled by the insulin-amino acid-mammalian target of the rapamycin-dependent sig-nal-transduction pathway. Research in the last decade has indicated not only that autophagy provides cells with oxidizable substrate when nutrients become scarce but also that it can provide protection against aging and a number of pathologies such as cancer, neurodegeneration, cardiac disease, diabetes, and infections
AbstractDegradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two maj...
Understanding the importance and necessity of the role of autophagy in health and disease is vital f...
Autophagy is a highly conserved lysosomal degradation pathway active at basal levels in all cells. H...
AbstractAutophagy delivers cytoplasmic material and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The for...
Autophagy is a self-degradative process that is important for balancing sources of energy at critica...
Autophagy is a conserved proteolytic mechanism that degrades cytoplasmic material including cell org...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that is essential for survival, differentiation, develo...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy, a vital catabolic process that degrades cytoplasmic components within the lysosome, is an...
Degradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two major prote...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that degrades damaged or superfluous cell components in...
Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent cellular degradation program that responds to a variety of environ...
Autophagy is a dynamic process, conserved in all eukaryotes. It is responsible for the degradation ...
(Macro)autophagy is a bulk degradation process that mediates the clearance of long-lived proteins an...
AbstractDegradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two maj...
Understanding the importance and necessity of the role of autophagy in health and disease is vital f...
Autophagy is a highly conserved lysosomal degradation pathway active at basal levels in all cells. H...
AbstractAutophagy delivers cytoplasmic material and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The for...
Autophagy is a self-degradative process that is important for balancing sources of energy at critica...
Autophagy is a conserved proteolytic mechanism that degrades cytoplasmic material including cell org...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that is essential for survival, differentiation, develo...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy, a vital catabolic process that degrades cytoplasmic components within the lysosome, is an...
Degradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two major prote...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that degrades damaged or superfluous cell components in...
Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent cellular degradation program that responds to a variety of environ...
Autophagy is a dynamic process, conserved in all eukaryotes. It is responsible for the degradation ...
(Macro)autophagy is a bulk degradation process that mediates the clearance of long-lived proteins an...
AbstractDegradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two maj...
Understanding the importance and necessity of the role of autophagy in health and disease is vital f...
Autophagy is a highly conserved lysosomal degradation pathway active at basal levels in all cells. H...