| Literature DB >> 31671556 |
Samantha N Devenport1,2, Yatrik M Shah3,4.
Abstract
Autophagy is an essential function to breakdown cellular proteins and organelles to recycle for new nutrient building blocks. In colorectal cancer, the importance of autophagy is becoming widely recognized as it demonstrates both pro- and anti-tumorigenic functions. In colon cancer, cell autonomous and non-autonomous roles for autophagy are essential in growth and progression. However, the mechanisms downstream of autophagy (to reduce or enhance tumor growth) are not well known. Additionally, the signals that activate and coordinate autophagy for tumor cell growth and survival are not clear. Here, we highlight the context- and cargo-dependent role of autophagy in proliferation, cell death, and cargo breakdown.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; cancer; colon; nutrient
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671556 PMCID: PMC6912527 DOI: 10.3390/cells8111349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Overview of autophagy subtypes; macro-autophagy, micro-autophagy, and CMA. Specifically, highlighting examples of selective macro-autophagy.
Functions of autophagy in CRC. A. Observation/Autophagy indicates what mechanisms are observed in CRC tumors and if autophagy is active or inactive. Tumor response is a summary of whether or not the autophagy activity indicated generates a pro- or anti- tumor response. B. Summary of therapies and their modulation of autophagy. Treatment: Which therapy was employed. Autophagy: how the stated therapy modulated autophagy activation. Tumor response: how manipulation of autophagy via therapeutic treatment impacted tumor growth.
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| Active | Pro-tumor | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-tumor | [ | |
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| Inactive | Pro-tumor | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-Tumor; Decreased proliferation in KRAS mutant cancers. | [ | |
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| Inactive | Anti-Tumor; Induced apoptosis. | [ | |
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| Inactive | Anti-Tumor; Elevated FOXO3a and transcriptional upregulation of pro-apoptotic genes. | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-Tumor; Promoted expression of LC3-II and induced autophagy. | [ | |
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| Inactive | Anti-Tumor; Inhibiting mutant Kras inhibits autophagy and induces apoptosis. | [ | |
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| Inactive | Anti-Tumor; Induced apoptosis. | [ | |
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| Inactive | Anti-Tumor; 5-FU treatment induced autophagy for resistance. Inhibition of autophagy reduced growth. | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-Tumor; Inhibited mTOR to activate autophagy and degrade CIP2A. | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-Tumor; Autophagy directed CyclinD1 degradation inhibited growth. | [ | |
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| Active | Anti-Tumor; Degradation of KRAS through autophagy induced cel death. | [ | |
Figure 2Schematic of the tumor microenvironment highlighting the impact of autophagy. Cell autonomous roles of autophagy in immune, epithelial or, the cross-talk between cell types in colorectal cancer.
Figure 3Schematic summarizing (A) Simplified overview of mechanisms of mTORC1 regulation. and (B) how nutrient modulation impacts autophagy. Bolded mechanisms indicate data from non-CRC samples. Please refer to text for detailed mechanisms.