• Home
  • Browse
    • Current Issue
    • By Issue
    • By Author
    • By Subject
    • Author Index
    • Keyword Index
  • Journal Info
    • About Journal
    • Aims and Scope
    • Editorial Board
    • Publication Ethics
    • Peer Review Process
  • Guide for Authors
  • Submit Manuscript
  • Contact Us
 
  • Login
  • Register
Home Articles List Article Information
  • Save Records
  • |
  • Printable Version
  • |
  • Recommend
  • |
  • How to cite Export to
    RIS EndNote BibTeX APA MLA Harvard Vancouver
  • |
  • Share Share
    CiteULike Mendeley Facebook Google LinkedIn Twitter
Journal of Medical Histology
arrow Articles in Press
arrow Current Issue
Journal Archive
Volume Volume 8 (2024)
Volume Volume 7 (2023)
Volume Volume 6 (2022)
Volume Volume 5 (2021)
Volume Volume 4 (2020)
Volume Volume 3 (2019)
Volume Volume 2 (2018)
Issue Issue 2
Issue Issue 1
Volume Volume 1 (2017)
Abo ElFadl, S. (2018). AUTOPHAGY; Recent Advances in Health and Disease. Journal of Medical Histology, 2(1), 1-10. doi: 10.21608/jmh.2018.5225.1040
Sahar Abo ElFadl. "AUTOPHAGY; Recent Advances in Health and Disease". Journal of Medical Histology, 2, 1, 2018, 1-10. doi: 10.21608/jmh.2018.5225.1040
Abo ElFadl, S. (2018). 'AUTOPHAGY; Recent Advances in Health and Disease', Journal of Medical Histology, 2(1), pp. 1-10. doi: 10.21608/jmh.2018.5225.1040
Abo ElFadl, S. AUTOPHAGY; Recent Advances in Health and Disease. Journal of Medical Histology, 2018; 2(1): 1-10. doi: 10.21608/jmh.2018.5225.1040

AUTOPHAGY; Recent Advances in Health and Disease

Article 1, Volume 2, Issue 1, June 2018, Page 1-10  XML PDF (1.86 MB)
Document Type: Review article
DOI: 10.21608/jmh.2018.5225.1040
View on SCiNiTO View on SCiNiTO
Author
Sahar Abo ElFadl*
Department of Medical Histology & Cell Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University
Abstract
Macroautophagy (autophagy) meaning self-eating is an evolutionary conserved intracellular degradation pathway, during which autophagosomes envelop bulk cytosol, unwanted or damaged organelles and misfolded proteins to handle them to the lysosomes for breakdown. There are many types of autophagy, which differ mainly in the site of cargo sequestration and in the type of cargo itself. The process of autophagy is a model in which autophagic vesicles develop into mature degradative autophagolysosomes in a series of distinguished steps namely: initiation, nucleation, expansion, maturation then finally degradation. The discovery of definitive biological markers for autophagy by the Japanese, Nobel Prize-awarded cell biologist Yoshinori Ohsumi and the advances in visualizing techniques enabled further insight of this vital process. Autophagy takes place at a low basal level constitutively, and can be potently induced by various types of stress conditions, such as starvation, hypoxia, pathogen invasion, and exercise. The functional relationship between apoptosis and autophagy is complex. Under certain circumstances, autophagy constitutes a stress adaptation that avoids cell death (and suppresses apoptosis), whereas in other cellular events, it constitutes an alternative cell-death pathway. Recently, autophagy dysfunction is linked to severe diseases such as neurodegeneration and cancer. Control of autophagy promises to facilitate the development of therapeutic and preventive measures for these morbid diseases for the well-being of mankind.
Keywords
apoptosis; autophagy; Cancer; Degenerative diseases; Fasting
Statistics
Article View: 418
PDF Download: 1,079
Home | Glossary | News | Aims and Scope | Sitemap
Top Top

Journal Management System. Designed by NotionWave.