自噬
细胞生物学
生物
癌变
线粒体
程序性细胞死亡
癌细胞
ULK1
癌症
癌症研究
细胞凋亡
生物化学
激酶
遗传学
蛋白激酶A
安普克
作者
Jessie Yanxiang Guo,Eileen White
出处
期刊:Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology
[Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory]
日期:2016-01-01
卷期号:81: 73-78
被引量:171
标识
DOI:10.1101/sqb.2016.81.030981
摘要
Macroautophagy (autophagy hereafter) is a process that collects cytoplasmic components, particularly mitochondria, and degrades them in lysosomes. In mammalian systems, basal autophagy levels are normally low but are profoundly stimulated by starvation and essential for survival. Cancer cells up-regulate autophagy and can be more autophagy-dependent than most normal tissues. Genetic deficiency in essential autophagy genes in tumors in many autochthonous mouse models for cancer reduces tumor growth. In K-rasG12D-driven non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and other models, autophagy sustains metabolism and survival. The mechanism by which autophagy promotes tumorigenesis varies in different contexts, but evidence points to a critical role for autophagy in sustaining metabolism, thereby preventing p53 activation, energy crisis, growth arrest, apoptosis, senescence, and activation of the immune response. Autophagy in NSCLC preserves mitochondrial quality and regulates their abundance. By degrading macromolecules in lysosomes, autophagy provides mitochondria with substrates to prevent energy crisis and fatal nucleotide pool depletion in starvation. We review here how autophagy supports mammalian survival and how cancer cells usurp this survival mechanism to maintain mitochondrial metabolism for their own benefit. Insights from these studies provide the rationale and approach to target the autophagy survival pathway for cancer therapy.
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