Literature DB >> 18000396

Neuronal autophagy: going the distance to the axon.

Zhenyu Yue1, Qing Jun Wang, Masaaki Komatsu.   

Abstract

Autophagy, a regulated cellular degradation process responsible for the turnover of long-lived proteins and organelles, has been increasingly implicated in neurological disorders. Although autophagy is mostly viewed as a stress-induced process, recent studies have indicated that it is constitutively active in central nervous system (CNS) neurons and is protective against neurodegeneration. Neurons are highly specialized, post-mitotic cells that are typically composed of a soma (cell body), a dendritic tree and an axon. The detailed process of autophagy in such a highly differentiated cell type remains to be characterized. To elucidate the physiological role of neuronal autophagy, we generated mutant mice containing a neural cell type-specific deletion of Atg7, an essential gene for autophagy. Establishment of these mutant mice allowed us to examine cell-autonomous events in cerebellar Purkinje cells deficient in autophagy. Our data reveal the indispensability of autophagy in the maintenance of axonal homeostasis and the prevention of axonal dystrophy and degeneration. Furthermore, our study implicates dysfunction of axonal autophagy as a potential mechanism underlying axonopathy, which is linked to neurodegeneration associated with numerous human neurological disorders. Finally, our study has raised a possibility that "constitutive autophagy" in neurons involves processes that are not typical of autophagy in other cell types, but rather is highly adapted to local physiological function in the axon, which is projected in a distance from one neuron to another for transducing neural signals.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18000396      PMCID: PMC2675167          DOI: 10.4161/auto.5202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Autophagy        ISSN: 1554-8627            Impact factor:   16.016


  25 in total

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7.  Autophagy is a part of ultrastructural synaptic pathology in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: a brain biopsy study.

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  27 in total

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Review 2.  Eaten alive: autophagy and neuronal cell death after hypoxia-ischemia.

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Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2008-01-17       Impact factor: 4.307

3.  Autophagy in neurite injury and neurodegeneration: in vitro and in vivo models.

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4.  Autophagy negatively regulates early axon growth in cortical neurons.

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7.  Geraniol Protects Against the Protein and Oxidative Stress Induced by Rotenone in an In Vitro Model of Parkinson's Disease.

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Review 8.  The role of local protein synthesis and degradation in axon regeneration.

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Review 9.  Roles of zinc and metallothionein-3 in oxidative stress-induced lysosomal dysfunction, cell death, and autophagy in neurons and astrocytes.

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