For more than 40 years, autophagy has been almost exclusively studied as a cellular response that allows adaptation to starvation situations. In nutrient-deprived conditions, cytoplasmic components and organelles are randomly sequestered into double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes, creating the notion that this pathway is a nonselective process (reviewed in Refs 1, 2). Recent results, however, have demonstrated that under certain circumstances, cargoes such as protein complexes, organelles and bacteria can be selectively and exclusively incorporated into double-membrane vesicles.(1) We have recently shown that actin plays an essential role in two selective types of autophagy in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cytoplasm to va...
Cells make use of autophagy to turnover and recycle damaged or superfluous cellular components, and ...
The delivery of proteins and organelles to the vacuole by autophagy involves membrane rearrangements...
Macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) is a catabolic pathway present in all eukaryotic cells. The yea...
For more than 40 years, autophagy has been almost exclusively studied as a cellular response that al...
Macroautophagy (referred to hereafter as autophagy) is an intracellular degradation pathway in which...
Autophagy is a degradative pathway crucial for multiple cellular processes and it is implicated in n...
Autophagy is the major degradative process for recycling cytoplasmic constituents and eliminating un...
Autophagy contributes to cellular homeostasis and is a defense mechanism for metazoan cells stressed...
Eukaryotes use the process of autophagy, in which structures targeted for lysosomal/vacuolar degrada...
Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials. Formin...
<div><p>Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials...
Autophagy, from two Greek words meaning “self-eating”, is a catabolic pathway allowing the degradati...
Autophagy is a conserved intracellular degradative pathway induced by various stress or developmenta...
AbstractTo survive extreme environmental conditions, and in response to certain developmental and pa...
Cells make use of autophagy to turnover and recycle damaged or superfluous cellular components, and ...
The delivery of proteins and organelles to the vacuole by autophagy involves membrane rearrangements...
Macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) is a catabolic pathway present in all eukaryotic cells. The yea...
For more than 40 years, autophagy has been almost exclusively studied as a cellular response that al...
Macroautophagy (referred to hereafter as autophagy) is an intracellular degradation pathway in which...
Autophagy is a degradative pathway crucial for multiple cellular processes and it is implicated in n...
Autophagy is the major degradative process for recycling cytoplasmic constituents and eliminating un...
Autophagy contributes to cellular homeostasis and is a defense mechanism for metazoan cells stressed...
Eukaryotes use the process of autophagy, in which structures targeted for lysosomal/vacuolar degrada...
Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials. Formin...
<div><p>Autophagy is a physiological process for the recycling and degradation of cellular materials...
Autophagy, from two Greek words meaning “self-eating”, is a catabolic pathway allowing the degradati...
Autophagy is a conserved intracellular degradative pathway induced by various stress or developmenta...
AbstractTo survive extreme environmental conditions, and in response to certain developmental and pa...
Cells make use of autophagy to turnover and recycle damaged or superfluous cellular components, and ...
The delivery of proteins and organelles to the vacuole by autophagy involves membrane rearrangements...
Macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) is a catabolic pathway present in all eukaryotic cells. The yea...