Autophogy Flashcards

1
Q

Autophagy

A
  • takes molecules into the cell

- brings into the lysosome to be degraded

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2
Q

Macroautophagy

A

cell engulfs large things outside cell

- autophagosome takes it to the lysosome

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3
Q

Microautophagy

A

Lysosome eats something on its own

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4
Q

Chaperone-mediated autophagy

A

Protein brings molecule to the lysosome

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5
Q

Steps of autophagy

A
  • vesicle nucleation of autophagosome
  • vesicle elongation of autophagosome
  • vesicle fusion of autophagosome
  • degradation
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6
Q

Where can you inhibit autophagy

A

Vesicle nucleation
Vesicle elongation
Vesicle fusion

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7
Q

When is autophagy induced?

A

During times of stress

  • biggest one is birth (subacute loss of nutrition, e.g. Atg7 knockout mice)
  • starvation (e.g. sleeping during night)
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8
Q

What are the key roles of autophagy in adults?

A
  • protection against infection and neurodegeneration

- keeps you alive during times of starvation (between meals)

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9
Q

What are some functions for (macro)autophagy?

A
  • re-cycle proteins and other macromolecules under conditions of nutrient deprivation
  • remove/recycle organelles (mitochondria and peroxisomes)
  • allow cell survival under stress conditions)
  • regulate antigen presentation to MHC system
  • neuro-protection
  • remove intracellular pathogens
  • remove intracellular pathogens
  • aging
  • tumor suppression
  • tumor promotion
  • regulate apoptosis
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10
Q

What is an autophagosome?

A

double membrane vesicle that has already taken up molecules to be degraded that then joins with a lysosome

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11
Q

How can autophagy be assessed?

A
  • electromicroscopy
  • following autophagosome associated proteins
  • western blots
  • fluorescent markers (GFP tag)
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12
Q

What do ATG genes do?

A
  • regulate autophagy but also other things
  • more than 20 gene products required to form autophagosomes
  • many of these molecules are potentially druggable
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13
Q

Do autophagy regulators do other things independent of autophagy?

A

yes

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14
Q

Are autophagy and apoptosis connected?Provide an example

A

yes

  • caspase cleavage of Beclin amplifies apoptosis
  • Beclin-1 functions as part of a protein complex regulated by Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL
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15
Q

What does BH3 mimetic ABT 737 do?

A
  • disrupts Beclin-1-Bcl-xl interaction

- affects both pathways - autophagy and apoptosis (trials are starting and don’t understand how affecting both)

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16
Q

How does “autophagic” cell death occur?

A
  • associated with formation of autophagic vesicles
  • requires autophagic machinery (inhibited by knockdown of Beclin-1/Atg6)
  • may be class where autophagy promotes death by making other death mechanisms (apoptosis and necrosis) easier
17
Q

What is the best example of clear autophagy-mediated effect that could be of practical therapeutic relevance?

A

autophagy as a protection of aggregate prone proteins (e.g. neurodegeneration)

18
Q

How can autophagy protect against neurodegeneration?

A
  • diseases caused by aggregate prone proteins (Alzheimers, Huntington’s)
  • increase autophagy - protect in vitro against cell death and in vivo against tissue damage
  • can use rapamycin and derivates or other autophagy inducers as chemoprevention/treatment for neurodegenerative diseases
19
Q

What can autophagy protect cells against?

A
  • nutrient deprivation induced stress
  • neurodegeneration
  • anti-cancer agents