Autophagy: fasting to be healthy

dc.contributor.authorMosab Nouraldein Mohammed Hamad
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-21T09:30:26Z
dc.date.available2023-11-21T09:30:26Z
dc.date.issued2018-03
dc.description.abstractAutophagy is an intracellular degradation system that delivers cytoplasmic constituents to the lysosome. Despite its simplicity, recent progress has demonstrated that autophagy plays a wide variety of physiological and pathophysiological roles, which are sometimes complex. Autophagy consists of several sequential steps²sequestration, transport to lysosomes, degradation, and utilization of degradation products²and each step may exert different function. This process is quite distinct from endocytosis-mediated lysosomal degradation of extracellular and plasma membrane proteins. There are three types of autophagy²macroautophagy, microautophagy, and chaperone-mediated autophagy²and the term ³autophagy´ usually indicates macroautophagy unless otherwise specified. Autophagy is mediated by a unique organelle called the autophagosome. As autophagosomes engulf a portion of cytoplasm, autophagy is generally thought to be a nonselective degradation system. This feature is in marked contrast to the ubiquitin±proteasome system, which specifically recognizes only ubiquitinated proteins for proteasomal degradation. It is therefore reasonable to assume that the ubiquitin±proteasome system has numerous specific functions because it can selectively degrade thousands of substrates
dc.identifier.urihttps://ds.eaeu.edu.sd/handle/10.58971/395
dc.language.isoother
dc.publisherجامعة الشيخ عبدالله البدري
dc.titleAutophagy: fasting to be healthy
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