Interactions of Autophagy and the Immune System in Health and Diseases

Autophagy is a highly conserved process that utilizes lysosomes to selectively degrade a variety of intracellular cargo, thus providing quality control over cellular components and maintaining cellular regulatory functions. Autophagy is triggered by multiple stimuli ranging from nutrient starvation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aarti Pant, Xiaomin Yao, Aude Lavedrine, Christophe Viret, Jacob Dockterman, Swati Chauhan, Chong-Shan Shi, Ravi Manjithaya, Ken Cadwell, Thomas A. Kufer, John H. Kehrl, Jörn Coers, L. David Sibley, Mathias Faure, Gregory A. Taylor, Santosh Chauhan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2022-12-01
Series:Autophagy Reports
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/27694127.2022.2119743
Description
Summary:Autophagy is a highly conserved process that utilizes lysosomes to selectively degrade a variety of intracellular cargo, thus providing quality control over cellular components and maintaining cellular regulatory functions. Autophagy is triggered by multiple stimuli ranging from nutrient starvation to microbial infection. Autophagy extensively shapes and modulates the inflammatory response, the concerted action of immune cells, and secreted mediators aimed to eradicate a microbial infection or to heal sterile tissue damage. Here, we first review how autophagy affects innate immune signaling, cell-autonomous immune defense, and adaptive immunity. Then, we discuss the role of non-canonical autophagy in context of microbial infections and inflammation. Finally, we review how crosstalk between autophagy and inflammation influences infectious diseases as well as metabolic and autoimmune disorders.
ISSN:2769-4127