As an evolutionarily conserved cellular process, autophagy plays an essential role in the cellular metabolism of eukaryotes as well as in viral infection and pathogenesis. Under physiological conditions, autophagy is able to meet cellular energy needs and maintain cellular homeostasis through degrading long-lived cellular proteins and recycling damaged organelles. Upon viral infection, host autophagy could degrade invading viruses and initial innate immune response and facilitate viral antigen presentation, all of which contribute to preventing viral infection and pathogenesis. However, viruses have evolved a variety of strategies during a long evolutionary process, by which they can hijack and subvert host autophagy for their own benefits....
Autophagy is a conservative evolutionary established cellular process functioning to maintain cell h...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway for physiological metabolism. Bilayer vesicles transport the...
Copyright: © 2014 Gu H, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Cr...
Virus-infected cells trigger a robust innate immune response and facilitate virus replication. Here,...
Autophagy is an important cellular catabolic process conserved from yeast to man. Double-membrane ve...
Autophagy is an evolutionary conserved cell process that plays a central role in eukaryotic cell met...
Autophagy is a catabolic process that is important for the removal of damaged organelles and long-li...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
International audienceAutophagy refers to the conserved, multi-step mechanism that delivers cytosoli...
The autophagy pathway likely evolved not only to maintain cellular and tissue homeostasis but also t...
Autophagy is a highly conserved intracellular degradation process that targets protein aggregates an...
Autophagy, originally described as a conserved bulk degradation pathway important to maintain cellul...
AbstractAutophagy is a conserved eukaryotic mechanism that mediates the removal of long-lived cytopl...
Autophagy is a conservative evolutionary established cellular process functioning to maintain cell h...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway for physiological metabolism. Bilayer vesicles transport the...
Copyright: © 2014 Gu H, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Cr...
Virus-infected cells trigger a robust innate immune response and facilitate virus replication. Here,...
Autophagy is an important cellular catabolic process conserved from yeast to man. Double-membrane ve...
Autophagy is an evolutionary conserved cell process that plays a central role in eukaryotic cell met...
Autophagy is a catabolic process that is important for the removal of damaged organelles and long-li...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
Autophagy is a cellular process involved in the degradation and turn-over of long-lived proteins and...
International audienceAutophagy refers to the conserved, multi-step mechanism that delivers cytosoli...
The autophagy pathway likely evolved not only to maintain cellular and tissue homeostasis but also t...
Autophagy is a highly conserved intracellular degradation process that targets protein aggregates an...
Autophagy, originally described as a conserved bulk degradation pathway important to maintain cellul...
AbstractAutophagy is a conserved eukaryotic mechanism that mediates the removal of long-lived cytopl...
Autophagy is a conservative evolutionary established cellular process functioning to maintain cell h...
Autophagy is a highly conserved pathway for physiological metabolism. Bilayer vesicles transport the...
Copyright: © 2014 Gu H, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Cr...