Since the publication of seminal work in the early 1970s by John Kerr and Andrew Wyllie1, we have been aware that mammalian cells have the genetically encoded capability to give up the ghost and trigger a highly conserved cell-suicide pathway called apoptosis. Not content with this important knowledge, many researchers have spent the intervening years attempting to identify and characterize other ‘programmed cell death’ (PCD) mechanisms that might also have important roles in development and disease. One of these was ‘autophagy’, a process by which cells became vacuolated and progressively devoid of cytoplasm. Over the years, ‘autophagic cell death’ has been linked with the timely death of cells in development, as well as the catastrophic loss of cells in several important human diseases. But is autophagy truly a cell death mechanism in its own right? Perhaps it is just an innocent bystander, unfairly accused on the basis of flimsy circumstantial evidence? The jury may finally be poised to return a decisive verdict….
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Feature|
April 01 2012
Autophagy and cell death: The jury's still out Free
Virginie M.S. Betin;
Virginie M.S. Betin
1University of Bristol, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Tom D.B. MacVicar
Tom D.B. MacVicar
1University of Bristol, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Online ISSN: 1740-1194
Print ISSN: 0954-982X
2012 © Biochemical Society
2012
Biochem (Lond) (2012) 34 (2): 14–19.
Citation
Jon D. Lane, Virginie M.S. Betin, Lilith Mannack, Tom D.B. MacVicar; Autophagy and cell death: The jury's still out. Biochem (Lond) 1 April 2012; 34 (2): 14–19. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BIO03402014
Download citation file:
105
Views