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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The machinery of macroautophagy

Yuchen Feng, +3 more
- 01 Jan 2014 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 1, pp 24-41
TLDR
This review focuses on macroautophagy, briefly describing the discovery of this process in mammalian cells, discussing the current views concerning the donor membrane that forms the phagophore, and characterizing the autophagy machinery including the available structural information.
Abstract
Autophagy is a primarily degradative pathway that takes place in all eukaryotic cells. It is used for recycling cytoplasm to generate macromolecular building blocks and energy under stress conditions, to remove superfluous and damaged organelles to adapt to changing nutrient conditions and to maintain cellular homeostasis. In addition, autophagy plays a critical role in cytoprotection by preventing the accumulation of toxic proteins and through its action in various aspects of immunity including the elimination of invasive microbes and its participation in antigen presentation. The most prevalent form of autophagy is macroautophagy, and during this process, the cell forms a double-membrane sequestering compartment termed the phagophore, which matures into an autophagosome. Following delivery to the vacuole or lysosome, the cargo is degraded and the resulting macromolecules are released back into the cytosol for reuse. The past two decades have resulted in a tremendous increase with regard to the molecular studies of autophagy being carried out in yeast and other eukaryotes. Part of the surge in interest in this topic is due to the connection of autophagy with a wide range of human pathophysiologies including cancer, myopathies, diabetes and neurodegenerative disease. However, there are still many aspects of autophagy that remain unclear, including the process of phagophore formation, the regulatory mechanisms that control its induction and the function of most of the autophagy-related proteins. In this review, we focus on macroautophagy, briefly describing the discovery of this process in mammalian cells, discussing the current views concerning the donor membrane that forms the phagophore, and characterizing the autophagy machinery including the available structural information.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cleaning the molecular machinery of cells via proteostasis, proteolysis and endocytosis selectively, effectively, and precisely: intracellular self-defense and cellular perturbations

TL;DR: Network coordinates of cellular processes (proteostasis, proteolysis, and endocytosis), and molecular chaperones are the key complements in the cell machinery and processes, and cellular pathways are responsible for the conformational maintenance, cellular concentration, interactions, protein synthesis, disposal of misfolded proteins, localization, folding, and degradation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategy of Hepatic Metabolic Defects Induced by beclin1 Heterozygosity in Adult Zebrafish.

TL;DR: An important role of beclin1 is highlighted in zebrafish liver development and energy metabolism, suggesting the crucial role of autophagy in maintaining homeostasis of the nutrient metabolism in fish species.
Journal ArticleDOI

The roles, controversies, and combination therapies of autophagy in lung cancer

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of published articles on autophagy in the context of lung cancer to have a complete view of the role of auto-gathering in lung cancer and its possible treatments is provided in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Wacky Bridge to mTORC1 Dimerization.

TL;DR: David-Morrison et al. (2016) show that the Drosophila protein Wacky and its mammalian counterpart WAC act as adaptors in the process of mTORC1 dimerization.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Autophagy in Osteoarthritic Cartilage

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors discuss the character of autophagy in osteoarthritis and the process of the autophagous pathway, which can be modulated by some drugs, key molecules and non-coding RNAs (microRNAs, long non coding RNAs and circular RNAs).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

AMPK and mTOR regulate autophagy through direct phosphorylation of Ulk1

TL;DR: A molecular mechanism for regulation of the mammalian autophagy-initiating kinase Ulk1, a homologue of yeast ATG1, is demonstrated and a signalling mechanism for UlK1 regulation and autophagic induction in response to nutrient signalling is revealed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutations in the parkin gene cause autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism

TL;DR: Mutations in the newly identified gene appear to be responsible for the pathogenesis of Autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism, and the protein product is named ‘Parkin’.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tissue fractionation studies. 6. Intracellular distribution patterns of enzymes in rat-liver tissue

TL;DR: The results are shown to favour the ferryl ion structure, or an isomer of this structure, for the higher oxidation state, and theHigher oxidation state may provisionally be named ferrylmyoglobin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autophagy: process and function

TL;DR: In this review, the process of autophagy is summarized, and the role of autophileagy is discussed in a process-based manner.
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