National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Autophagy in the immune system
Vávra, Dan ; Černý, Jan (advisor) ; Janštová, Vanda (referee)
Autophagy is an essential, homeostatic process - survival mechanism that protects cells by various ways: cells break down their own components to recycle nutrients, remodel and dispose unwanted cytoplasmic constituents. Autophagy is involved in the degradation of long-lived proteins and entire organelles, but paradoxically, considering important prosurvival functions, autophagy may be deleterious. It plays an important role during development, tumor suppression, immunity and is required for the adaptation to environmental stresses such as starvation. Recent studies indicate, that autophagy is a central player in the immunological control of bacterial, parasitic and viral infections. The process of autophagy may degrade intracellulal pathogens. This work describes the mechanism of autophagy and highlights the role of autophagy in innate and adaptive imunity, summarizes some advances in understanding the functions of autophagy and its possible roles in the causation and prevention of human deseases.
The significance of autophagy and its communication with the apoptotic machinery for cellular survival or cell death
Pazour, Vítězslav ; Anděra, Ladislav (advisor) ; Černý, Jan (referee)
Autophagy is a cellular proces, taht allows degradation of a portion of cytoplasm, protein aggregates or entire organelles. Major function of autophagy is the maintainance of cellular homeostasis, the protection against stress and mobilization of internal resources. However, autophagy also has a role in imunity, development and differentiation. Autophagic signaling can interact with apoptotic machinery at several levels via regulatory proteins of both pathways or via mutual degradation or cleavage of the components of both pathways. Autophagy can communicate with both extrinsic and intrinsic pathways of apoptosis. Under certain circumstances can autophagy by itself also induce cell death. Autophagic cell death called also programmed cell death of type II is accompanied by massive vacuolization and lysosomal autodestruction of the affected cell. Autophagic cell death was documented during Drosophila development but also in mammalian cells. Autophagy also play importamt role in tumorogenesis, where it can either protect tumor cells against various stresses or it can contribute to their death. Further research of autophagic signaling and mechanisms of communication between autophagy and apoptosis may ont only extend our knowledge on these essential processes but can also contribute to cancer therapy. Powered...
Autophagy in the immune system
Vávra, Dan ; Černý, Jan (advisor) ; Janštová, Vanda (referee)
Autophagy is an essential, homeostatic process - survival mechanism that protects cells by various ways: cells break down their own components to recycle nutrients, remodel and dispose unwanted cytoplasmic constituents. Autophagy is involved in the degradation of long-lived proteins and entire organelles, but paradoxically, considering important prosurvival functions, autophagy may be deleterious. It plays an important role during development, tumor suppression, immunity and is required for the adaptation to environmental stresses such as starvation. Recent studies indicate, that autophagy is a central player in the immunological control of bacterial, parasitic and viral infections. The process of autophagy may degrade intracellulal pathogens. This work describes the mechanism of autophagy and highlights the role of autophagy in innate and adaptive imunity, summarizes some advances in understanding the functions of autophagy and its possible roles in the causation and prevention of human deseases.

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