IAD Index of Academic Documents
  • Home Page
  • About
    • About Izmir Academy Association
    • About IAD Index
    • IAD Team
    • IAD Logos and Links
    • Policies
    • Contact
  • Submit A Journal
  • Submit A Conference
  • Submit Paper/Book
    • Submit a Preprint
    • Submit a Book
  • Contact
  • Acıbadem Üniversitesi Sağlık Bilimleri Dergisi
  • Issue:4
  • Otofaji: Bir Hücresel Stres Yanıtı ve Ölüm Mekanizması

Otofaji: Bir Hücresel Stres Yanıtı ve Ölüm Mekanizması

Authors : Devrim Öz ARSLAN, Gözde KORKMAZ, Devrim GÖZÜAÇIK
Pages : 184-194
View : 40 | Download : 24
Publication Date : 2011-12-01
Article Type : Other Papers
Abstract :Abstract: Autophagy is a physiological phenomenon responsible for the degradation of long-lived proteins, organelles and cytoplasmic fragments. It allows cellular recycling following lysosomal degradation and helps the cell to survive various stress conditions including starvation, growth factor and oxidative stress. Paradoxically, under certain conditions autophagy may kill the cell through a caspase-independent, non-apoptotic type of cell death Type II cell death or autophagic cell death . Several lines of evidence point out to a direct connection between classical apoptosis and autophagy. Molecular mechanisms of apoptosis-autophagy connection start to be unraveled. The cross-talk between autophagy and apoptosis seems quite complex but certainly is critical for the development of novel diagnosis, follow-up and treatment modalities in health problems such as cancer, infections and neurodegenerative diseases
Keywords : autophagy, apoptosis, cell survival, signal tranduction

ORIGINAL ARTICLE URL
VIEW PAPER (PDF)

* There may have been changes in the journal, article,conference, book, preprint etc. informations. Therefore, it would be appropriate to follow the information on the official page of the source. The information here is shared for informational purposes. IAD is not responsible for incorrect or missing information.


Index of Academic Documents
İzmir Academy Association
CopyRight © 2023-2025