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Agephagy – Adapting Autophagy for Health During Aging

Title: Agephagy – Adapting Autophagy for Health During Aging
Authors: Stead, ER; Castillo-Quan, JI; Miguel, VEM; Lujan, C; Ketteler, R; Kinghorn, KJ; Bjedov, I
Source: Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology , 7 , Article 308. (2019)
Publisher Information: Frontiers Media SA
Publication Year: 2019
Collection: University College London: UCL Discovery
Subject Terms: autophagy; aging; target of rapamycin; insulin/IGF-1 signaling; proteostasis; DNA damage; mitophagy; anti-aging drugs
Description: Autophagy is a major cellular recycling process that delivers cellular material and entire organelles to lysosomes for degradation, in a selective or non-selective manner. This process is essential for the maintenance of cellular energy levels, components, and metabolites, as well as the elimination of cellular molecular damage, thereby playing an important role in numerous cellular activities. An important function of autophagy is to enable survival under starvation conditions and other stresses. The majority of factors implicated in aging are modifiable through the process of autophagy, including the accumulation of oxidative damage and loss of proteostasis, genomic instability and epigenetic alteration. These primary causes of damage could lead to mitochondrial dysfunction, deregulation of nutrient sensing pathways and cellular senescence, finally causing a variety of aging phenotypes. Remarkably, advances in the biology of aging have revealed that aging is a malleable process: a mild decrease in signaling through nutrient-sensing pathways can improve health and extend lifespan in all model organisms tested. Consequently, autophagy is implicated in both aging and age-related disease. Enhancement of the autophagy process is a common characteristic of all principal, evolutionary conserved anti-aging interventions, including dietary restriction, as well as inhibition of target of rapamycin (TOR) and insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS). As an emerging and critical process in aging, this review will highlight how autophagy can be modulated for health improvement.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: text
Language: English
Relation: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10087070/
Availability: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10087070/1/fcell-07-00308.pdf; https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10087070/
Rights: open
Accession Number: edsbas.BC3B5214
Database: BASE