Publication | Open Access
Autophagy and heterophagy dysregulation leads to retinal pigment epithelium dysfunction and development of age-related macular degeneration
323
Citations
110
References
2013
Year
MitophagyOcular DiseaseImmunologyAge-related Macular DegenerationOxidative StressCell AutophagyRetinaAutophagyDegenerative PathologyCell SignalingOphthalmologyAge-related DiseasesOcular PathologyHeterophagy DysregulationCell BiologyRisk FactorsDevelopmental BiologyPigment Epithelium DysfunctionGlaucomaMedicine
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a complex, degenerative and progressive eye disease that usually does not lead to complete blindness, but can result in severe loss of central vision. Risk factors for AMD include age, genetics, diet, smoking, oxidative stress and many cardiovascular-associated risk factors. Autophagy is a cellular housekeeping process that removes damaged organelles and protein aggregates, whereas heterophagy, in the case of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), is the phagocytosis of exogenous photoreceptor outer segments. Numerous studies have demonstrated that both autophagy and heterophagy are highly active in the RPE. To date, there is increasing evidence that constant oxidative stress impairs autophagy and heterophagy, as well as increases protein aggregation and causes inflammasome activation leading to the pathological phenotype of AMD. This review ties together these crucial pathological topics and reflects upon autophagy as a potential therapeutic target in AMD.
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2010 | 5.3K | |
p62/SQSTM1 Binds Directly to Atg8/LC3 to Facilitate Degradation of Ubiquitinated Protein Aggregates by Autophagy Serhiy Pankiv, Terje Høyvarde Clausen, Trond Lamark, Journal of Biological Chemistry MitophagyFacilitate DegradationMolecular BiologyUbiquitinated Protein AggregatesBasal Constitutive Autophagy | 2007 | 4.5K |
2010 | 3.7K | |
2008 | 3K | |
2010 | 2.9K | |
2004 | 2.7K | |
2008 | 2.4K | |
2012 | 2.1K | |
1989 | 1.9K | |
2003 | 1.5K |
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