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Autophagy

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entity584 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Autophagy

Pathway Diagram

flowchart TD N0["AUTOPHAGY"] N1["MTORC1"] N1 -->|"inhibits"| N0 N2["CANCER"] N0 -->|"associated with"| N2 N3["AGING"] N0 -->|"associated with"| N3 N4["ULK1"] N4 -->|"regulates"| N0 N5["AMPK"] N5 -->|"activates"| N0 N0 -->|"regulates"| N3 N6["SIRT1"] N6 -->|"activates"| N0 N7["ROS"] N7 -->|"activates"| N0 N8["P62"] N8 -->|"regulates"| N0 N9["STING"] N9 -->|"activates"| N0 N10["ATG"] N10 -->|"regulates"| N0 N11["BECN1"] N11 -->|"activates"| N0

Overview

Autophagy is a highly conserved cellular degradation pathway through which eukaryotic cells selectively engulf and digest intracellular components, including proteins, lipids, organelles, and protein aggregates. The term derives from Greek words meaning "self-eating." This catabolic process is essential for cellular homeostasis, recycling of cellular material, and maintaining cellular energy balance during nutrient stress. Autophagy represents one of the primary quality control mechanisms in neurons, which are post-mitotic cells particularly vulnerable to accumulation of misfolded proteins and damaged organelles. Three main forms of autophagy exist: macroautophagy, microautophagy, and chaperone-mediated autophagy, with macroautophagy being the most extensively studied and relevant to neurodegeneration[@pmid35435793].

Function/Biology


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