Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials. Forming the autophagosome from the phagophore, a cup-shaped double-membrane vesicle, is a critical step in autophagy. The origin of the cup shape of the phagophore is poorly understood. In yeast, fusion of a small number of Atg9-containing vesicles is considered a key step in autophagosome biogenesis, aided by Atg1 complexes (ULK1 in mammals) localized at the preautophagosomal structure (PAS). In particular, the S-shaped Atg17-Atg31-Atg29 subcomplex of Atg1 is critical for phagophore nucleation at the PAS. To study this process, we simulated membrane remodeling processes in the presence and absence of membrane associated Atg17. We show that at leas...
Autophagy is a conserved mechanism that is essential for cell survival in starvation. Moreover, auto...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway that is essential for cell survival and is implicated in sev...
Autophagy is an essential process in cells whereby, paradoxically, destruction of cellular component...
Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials. Formin...
Autophagy is a degradative pathway crucial for multiple cellular processes and it is implicated in n...
SummaryMacroautophagy is a bulk clearance mechanism in which the double-membraned phagophore grows a...
Eukaryotes use the process of autophagy, in which structures targeted for lysosomal/vacuolar degrada...
Autophagy is the major degradative process for recycling cytoplasmic constituents and eliminating un...
Research SquareAbstract Autophagy is a fundamental cellular recycling pathway that captures cytoplas...
Autophagosomes are unique organelles that form de novo as double-membrane vesicles engulfing cytosol...
Autophagosomes, the hallmark of autophagy, are double-membrane vesicles sequestering cytoplasmic com...
Yeast macroautophagy begins with the de novo formation of a double-membrane phagophore at the preaut...
Autophagosomes are double-membrane vesicles that sequester cytoplasmic material for lysosomal degrad...
Macroautophagy (referred to hereafter as autophagy) is an intracellular degradation pathway in which...
Many biomolecules undergo liquid–liquid phase separation to form liquid-like condensates that mediat...
Autophagy is a conserved mechanism that is essential for cell survival in starvation. Moreover, auto...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway that is essential for cell survival and is implicated in sev...
Autophagy is an essential process in cells whereby, paradoxically, destruction of cellular component...
Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials. Formin...
Autophagy is a degradative pathway crucial for multiple cellular processes and it is implicated in n...
SummaryMacroautophagy is a bulk clearance mechanism in which the double-membraned phagophore grows a...
Eukaryotes use the process of autophagy, in which structures targeted for lysosomal/vacuolar degrada...
Autophagy is the major degradative process for recycling cytoplasmic constituents and eliminating un...
Research SquareAbstract Autophagy is a fundamental cellular recycling pathway that captures cytoplas...
Autophagosomes are unique organelles that form de novo as double-membrane vesicles engulfing cytosol...
Autophagosomes, the hallmark of autophagy, are double-membrane vesicles sequestering cytoplasmic com...
Yeast macroautophagy begins with the de novo formation of a double-membrane phagophore at the preaut...
Autophagosomes are double-membrane vesicles that sequester cytoplasmic material for lysosomal degrad...
Macroautophagy (referred to hereafter as autophagy) is an intracellular degradation pathway in which...
Many biomolecules undergo liquid–liquid phase separation to form liquid-like condensates that mediat...
Autophagy is a conserved mechanism that is essential for cell survival in starvation. Moreover, auto...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway that is essential for cell survival and is implicated in sev...
Autophagy is an essential process in cells whereby, paradoxically, destruction of cellular component...