학술논문

Autophagy Defects in Skeletal Myopathies
Document Type
article
Source
Annual Review of Pathology Mechanisms of Disease. 15(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Brain Disorders
Aging
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Musculoskeletal
Animals
Autophagy
Humans
Lysosomes
Muscle
Skeletal
Muscular Diseases
Protein Aggregation
Pathological
macroautophagy
granulophagy
chaperone-assisted selective autophagy
rimmed vacuole
autophagic vacuolar myopathy
myofibrillar myopathy
multiple system proteinopathy
GNE myopathy
inclusion body myositis
muscular dystrophy
centronuclear myopathy
Pathology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process that targets different types of cytoplasmic cargo (such as bulk cytoplasm, damaged cellular organelles, and misfolded protein aggregates) for lysosomal degradation. Autophagy is activated in response to biological stress and also plays a critical role in the maintenance of normal cellular homeostasis; the latter function is particularly important for the integrity of postmitotic, metabolically active tissues, such as skeletal muscle. Through impairment of muscle homeostasis, autophagy dysfunction contributes to the pathogenesis of many different skeletal myopathies; the observed autophagy defects differ from disease to disease but have been shown to involve all steps of the autophagic cascade (from induction to lysosomal cargo degradation) and to impair both bulk and selective autophagy. To highlight the molecular and cellular mechanisms that are shared among different myopathies with deficient autophagy, these disorders are discussed based on the nature of the underlying autophagic defect rather than etiology or clinical presentation.