- Therapeutic potential of autophagy in immunity and inflammation . . .
Inflammation is involved in the development and progression of various human diseases, and as a result, autophagy might be a potential target to prevent and treat inflammatory diseases
- Autophagy in inflammation, infection, and immunometabolism
As a cytoplasmic degradative pathway, autophagy protects from exogenous hazards, including infection, and from endogenous sources of inflammation, including molecular aggregates and damaged organelles
- Autophagy in inflammation, infection, and immunometabolism
As a cytoplasmic degradative pathway, autophagy protects from exogenous hazards, including infection, and from endogenous sources of inflammation, including molecular aggregates and damaged organelles
- Frontiers | Autophagy-Inflammation Interplay During Infection . . .
While autophagy is activated by inflammatory components, it also regulates various aspects of inflammation, including activation of inflammatory signals, secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, activation or inhibition of inflammasomes, and composition of immune cells in tissues
- Autophagy and inflammation - Springer
The relationship between autophagy and inflammation is complex, both inductive and suppressive In this review, we summarized recent studies in autophagy and inflammation, and discussed the func-tions of the autophagy pathway and the autophagy pro-teins in inflammation and inflammatory diseases
- Autophagy and Inflammation: Regulatory Roles in Viral Infections - MDPI
As a crucial regulator of inflammation, autophagy can either promote or inhibit the occurrence of inflammatory responses In turn, inflammation can establish negative feedback loops by modulating autophagy to suppress excessive inflammatory reactions
- What is autophagy that Sonali Bendre recently advocated for?
As cancer survivor Sonali Bendre vouches for ‘autophagy for healing,’ experts say it ‘definitely exists’ but its role is ‘complicated’: ‘Not a cure switch we can turn on’ Cancer cells behave differently from normal cells, and some tumours may even use autophagy to survive
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