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Figure 2. — Organelle-specific autophagy in inflammatory diseases: a potential therapeutic t
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Created: 2026-04-21T18:29:40
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Figure 2.Figure 2
Quality control of multiple organelles through organelle-specific autophagy in infection and sepsis. (A) Nucleophagy is critically involved in preventing the invasion of pathogens by maintaining the integrity of epidermal barrier. (B) As initiated by LPS induced SESN2 upregulation, S. aureus- induced pneumonia as well as sepsis-related renal dysfunction, mitophagy is essential for the balance of inflammatory response and survival of cells in infection or septic challenge by limiting persistent NLRP3 inflammasome activation and eliminating damaged mitochondria respectively. (C) Induction of pexophagy attenuates LPS-mediated renal damage by restoring dysfunction of peroxisomes and redox imbalance. (D) Induction of lysophagy reportedly limits the invasion of intracellular M. tuberculosis in LGALS3- and TRIM16-dependent pathways, accompanied with recruitment of core autophagy proteins, including BECN1, ULK1 and ATG16L1. (E) Reticulophagy can promote the elimination of bacteria and virus
▸Metadata
| pmid | paper-ddadf06dfbf1 |
| caption | Quality control of multiple organelles through organelle-specific autophagy in infection and sepsis. (A) Nucleophagy is critically involved in preventing the invasion of pathogens by maintaining the i |
| image_url | https://www.ebi.ac.uk/europepmc/articles/PMC8007140/bin/KAUP_A_1725377_F0002_OC.jpg |
| paper_title | Organelle-specific autophagy in inflammatory diseases: a potential therapeutic target underlying the quality control of multiple organelles. |
| figure_label | Figure 2. |
| figure_number | 2 |
| _schema_version | 1 |
| source_strategy | pmc_api |
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