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Role of autophagy in aging: The good, the bad, and the ugly

Journal

AGING CELL
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acel.13753

Keywords

aging; AMPK; cancer; mTOR; SASP; senescence

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Autophagy is a crucial process for maintaining cellular metabolic demands and preventing aging, disease, and cancer. Genetic defects in autophagy genes and age-induced decline of autophagy can lead to various abnormalities and loss of cellular control.
Autophagy (self-eating) is a conserved catabolic homeostatic process required for cellular metabolic demands by removal of the damaged molecules and organelles and for alleviation of stress initiated by pathology and infection. By such actions, autophagy is essential for the prevention of aging, disease, and cancer. Genetic defects of autophagy genes lead to a host of developmental, metabolic, and pathological aberrations. Similarly, the age-induced decline in autophagy leads to the loss of cellular homeostatic control. Paradoxically, such a valuable mechanism is hijacked by diseases, during tumor progression and by senescence, presumably due to high levels of metabolic demand. Here, we review both the role of autophagy in preventing cellular decline in aging by fulfillment of cellular bioenergetic demands and its contribution to the maintenance of the senescent state and SASP by acting on energy and nutritional sensors and diverse signaling pathways.

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