ARCHIVES
VOL. 4, ISSUE 3 (2019)
Dysfunctional processes in autophagy of cancer cells and therapeutic implications
Authors
Aurelian Udristioiu, Manole Cojocaru, Delia Nica- Badea, Viviana Roman
Abstract
Autophagy is a cellular process that maintains the homeostasis of the normal cell, but autophagic dysfunction is associated with human diseases, such as cancer. In cancer, the autophagy can be neutral, tumor-suppressive, or tumor-promoting in different contexts. Genomic analysis of human cancers indicates that the loss or mutation of core autophagy genes, (Atg) is uncommon, whereas oncogenic events that activate autophagy and lysosomal biogenesis have been identified. The initial signal to form auto-phagosomes is by the class III phosphatidyl-inositol (PI) 3 kinase complex consisting of sequence genes, Beclin1/Atg6 and class III PI3K (Vps34). This process is negatively regulated by binding of Bcl-2 family members such as Bcl-xL to Beclin1 preventing Beclin1 binding to the PI3K-III complex and thereby reducing autophagy. Optimal combination of inductors or inhibitors of autophagy with chemo or radiotherapy in a variety of tumor types in different phases can be successful approaches for improve the effect of anticancer therapies.
Download
Pages:53-61
How to cite this article:
Aurelian Udristioiu, Manole Cojocaru, Delia Nica- Badea, Viviana Roman "Dysfunctional processes in autophagy of cancer cells and therapeutic implications". International Journal of Biology Research, Vol 4, Issue 3, 2019, Pages 53-61
Download Author Certificate
Please enter the email address corresponding to this article submission to download your certificate.

