Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and superfluous proteins are degraded, for maintaining the correct cellular balance during stress insult. It involves formation of double-membrane vesicles, named autophagosomes, that capture cytosolic cargo and deliver it to lysosomes, where the breakdown products are recycled back to cytoplasm. On the basis of degraded cell components, some selective types of autophagy can be identified (mitophagy, ribophagy, reticulophagy, lysophagy, pexophagy, lipophagy, and glycophagy). Dysregulation of autophagy can induce various disease manifestations, such as inflammation, aging, metabolic diseases, neurodegenerative disorders and cancer. The understanding o...
A utophagy, which literally translates into “eatingone’s own self, ” is an evolutionarily conservedc...
Degradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two major prote...
AbstractAutophagy delivers cytoplasmic material and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The for...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy is a self-degradative process that is important for balancing sources of energy at critica...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that degrades damaged or superfluous cell components in...
Autophagy, a process of cellular self-digestion, delivers intracellular components including superfl...
Autophagy is a regular and substantial “clear-out process„ that occurs within the cell a...
Macroautophagy (henceforth referred to as autophagy) is a process conserved from yeast to man for th...
Autophagy is the catabolic mechanism that involves cell degradation of unnecessary or dysfunctional ...
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 a conserved process that uses double-membrane vesicles to deliver cytoplasmic contents ...
Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent cellular degradation program that responds to a variety of environ...
Autophagy, or cellular self-digestion, is a cellular pathway involved in protein and organelle degra...
A utophagy, which literally translates into “eatingone’s own self, ” is an evolutionarily conservedc...
Degradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two major prote...
AbstractAutophagy delivers cytoplasmic material and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The for...
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, through which damaged organelles and supe...
Autophagy is a self-degradative process that is important for balancing sources of energy at critica...
Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that degrades damaged or superfluous cell components in...
Autophagy, a process of cellular self-digestion, delivers intracellular components including superfl...
Autophagy is a regular and substantial “clear-out process„ that occurs within the cell a...
Macroautophagy (henceforth referred to as autophagy) is a process conserved from yeast to man for th...
Autophagy is the catabolic mechanism that involves cell degradation of unnecessary or dysfunctional ...
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 a conserved process that uses double-membrane vesicles to deliver cytoplasmic contents ...
Autophagy is a lysosome-dependent cellular degradation program that responds to a variety of environ...
Autophagy, or cellular self-digestion, is a cellular pathway involved in protein and organelle degra...
A utophagy, which literally translates into “eatingone’s own self, ” is an evolutionarily conservedc...
Degradation processes are important for optimal functioning of eukaryotic cells. The two major prote...
AbstractAutophagy delivers cytoplasmic material and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The for...