S'identifier

Autophagy is a self-digesting process by which a cell protects itself from threats both within and outside the cell, ranging from abnormal proteins to invading bacteria. In this process, obsolete components of the cell and invading microbes are degraded by hydrolytic enzymes active in an acidic environment of the lysosomal lumen.

An autophagic pathway consists of a series of signaling events activated in response to diverse stress and physiological conditions such as food deprivation, hyperthermia, hypoxia, and aging. The component to be digested is sequestered, transported to lysosomes, and degraded there. The process often results in lysosomal remnants such as lipofuscin granules and residual bodies.

Studies indicate that a marked increase in autophagy maintains survival during starvation. Mammalian liver cell mitochondria are estimated to undergo autophagy every 10 minutes.

Defective autophagy, occurring during lysosomal storage diseases or certain neurodegenerative diseases, may prevent the degradation of invading microbes, unwanted or abnormal proteins resulting in infections, neurodegenerative disorders, and even cancers. Experimentally blocking autophagy in a particular portion of the brain shows an extensive loss of nerve cells, revealing the role of the process in protecting the cells.

Tags
AutophagySelf digesting ProcessCell ProtectionAbnormal ProteinsInvading BacteriaHydrolytic EnzymesLysosomal LumenAutophagic PathwaySignaling EventsStress And Physiological ConditionsFood DeprivationHyperthermiaHypoxiaAgingSequestered ComponentsLysosomesDegradation ProcessLysosomal RemnantsLipofuscin GranulesResidual BodiesSurvival During StarvationDefective AutophagyLysosomal Storage DiseasesNeurodegenerative DiseasesInfectionsCancersBlocking AutophagyNerve Cells Protection

Du chapitre 17:

article

Now Playing

17.20 : Autophagy

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

4.0K Vues

article

17.1 : Introduction au trafic membranaire

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

6.1K Vues

article

17.2 : Vésicules à manteau protéique COP

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

7.1K Vues

article

17.3 : Vésicules à clathrine

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

6.2K Vues

article

17.4 : Phosphoinositides et PIPs

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

6.7K Vues

article

17.5 : Assemblage du manteau et GTPases

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

3.4K Vues

article

17.6 : Libération des vésicules à manteau

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

2.8K Vues

article

17.7 : Protéines Rab

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

3.7K Vues

article

17.8 : Cascades Rab

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

2.6K Vues

article

17.9 : SNAREs et fusion membranaire

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

8.7K Vues

article

17.10 : Le compartiment intermédiare RE-Golgi

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

2.2K Vues

article

17.11 : Voie de récupération du réticulum endoplasmique

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

3.6K Vues

article

17.12 : Appareil de Golgi

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

10.3K Vues

article

17.13 : Glycosylation des protéines

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

6.3K Vues

article

17.14 : Protéoglycanes

Trafic des membranes intracellulaires

3.8K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.