Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved intracellular degradation system aiming to maintain cell homeostasis in response to cellular stress. At physiological states, basal or constitutive level of autophagy activity is usually low; however, it is markedly up-regulated in response to oxidative stress, nutrient starvation, and various immunological stimuli including pathogens. Many studies over the last years have indicated the implication of autophagy in a plethora of cell populations and functions. In this review, we focus on the role of autophagy in the biology of neutrophils. Early studies provided a link between autophagy and neutrophil cell death, a process essential for resolution of inflammation. Since then, several lines of evidence...
Neutrophils are produced in the bone marrow from stem cells that proliferate and differentiate to ma...
Immune responses must be well restrained in a steady state to avoid excessive inflammation. However,...
Autophagy represents a homeostatic cellular mechanism for the turnover of organelles and proteins, t...
SummaryAutophagy, an intracellular degradation and energy recycling mechanism, is emerging as an imp...
Autophagy, an intracellular degradation and energy recycling mechanism, is emerging as an important ...
Autophagy has been demonstrated to have an essential function in several cellular hematopoietic diff...
Neutrophils are critical and short-lived mediators of innate immunity that require constant replenis...
Autophagy is a conserved proteolytic mechanism that degrades cytoplasmic material including cell org...
Neutrophils are endowed with a plethora of toxic molecules that are mobilized in immune responses. T...
Autophagy is a catabolic mechanism, allowing the degradation of cytoplasmic content via lysosomal ac...
The migration of neutrophils from the blood circulation to sites of infection or injury is a key imm...
Neutrophil granulocytes, or neutrophils, are the most abundant circulating leukocytes in humans and ...
Neutrophils not only play a critical role as a first line of defense against bacteria and fungi infe...
Macrophages and neutrophils are vital cells of the immune system, performing crucial innate function...
Autophagy is well equipped functionally to isolate microbial pathogens in autophagosomes and to carr...
Neutrophils are produced in the bone marrow from stem cells that proliferate and differentiate to ma...
Immune responses must be well restrained in a steady state to avoid excessive inflammation. However,...
Autophagy represents a homeostatic cellular mechanism for the turnover of organelles and proteins, t...
SummaryAutophagy, an intracellular degradation and energy recycling mechanism, is emerging as an imp...
Autophagy, an intracellular degradation and energy recycling mechanism, is emerging as an important ...
Autophagy has been demonstrated to have an essential function in several cellular hematopoietic diff...
Neutrophils are critical and short-lived mediators of innate immunity that require constant replenis...
Autophagy is a conserved proteolytic mechanism that degrades cytoplasmic material including cell org...
Neutrophils are endowed with a plethora of toxic molecules that are mobilized in immune responses. T...
Autophagy is a catabolic mechanism, allowing the degradation of cytoplasmic content via lysosomal ac...
The migration of neutrophils from the blood circulation to sites of infection or injury is a key imm...
Neutrophil granulocytes, or neutrophils, are the most abundant circulating leukocytes in humans and ...
Neutrophils not only play a critical role as a first line of defense against bacteria and fungi infe...
Macrophages and neutrophils are vital cells of the immune system, performing crucial innate function...
Autophagy is well equipped functionally to isolate microbial pathogens in autophagosomes and to carr...
Neutrophils are produced in the bone marrow from stem cells that proliferate and differentiate to ma...
Immune responses must be well restrained in a steady state to avoid excessive inflammation. However,...
Autophagy represents a homeostatic cellular mechanism for the turnover of organelles and proteins, t...