Autophagy in metazoans: cell survival in the land of plenty

JJ Lum, RJ DeBerardinis, CB Thompson - Nature reviews Molecular …, 2005 - nature.com
Nature reviews Molecular cell biology, 2005nature.com
Cells require a constant supply of macromolecular precursors and oxidizable substrates to
maintain viability. Unicellular eukaryotes lack the ability to regulate nutrient concentrations in
their extracellular environment. So when environmental nutrients are depleted, these
organisms catabolize existing cytoplasmic components to support ATP production to
maintain survival, a process known as autophagy. By contrast, the environment of
metazoans normally contains abundant extracellular nutrients, but a cell's ability to take up …
Abstract
Cells require a constant supply of macromolecular precursors and oxidizable substrates to maintain viability. Unicellular eukaryotes lack the ability to regulate nutrient concentrations in their extracellular environment. So when environmental nutrients are depleted, these organisms catabolize existing cytoplasmic components to support ATP production to maintain survival, a process known as autophagy. By contrast, the environment of metazoans normally contains abundant extracellular nutrients, but a cell's ability to take up these nutrients is controlled by growth factor signal transduction. Despite evolving the ability to maintain a constant supply of extracellular nutrients, metazoans have retained a complete set of autophagy genes. The physiological relevance of autophagy in such species is just beginning to be explored.
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