Autophagy in the pathogenesis of disease
Levine B, Kroemer G · 2008 · Cell
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2007.12.018View source ↗
“Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway essential for survival, differentiation, development, and homeostasis.”
Summary
This Cell review by Beth Levine and Guido Kroemer — two of the field's most influential autophagy researchers — surveys the role of cellular self-digestion across human disease. The authors organize the field around a core principle: autophagy is fundamentally adaptive, evolved to protect organisms against diverse pathologies including infections, cancer, neurodegeneration, aging, and heart disease. They review how dysregulation of autophagy contributes to specific disease processes — protein-aggregation neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's), Crohn's disease, cardiomyopathies, and certain cancers. The mTOR pathway sits at the center of the review's mechanistic framework, with TOR-suppressing tumor suppressors (PTEN, TSC1, TSC2) acting as autophagy stimulators and TOR-activating oncogenes (PI3K, Akt) as autophagy inhibitors. The review also acknowledges autophagy's dual-edge nature: prosurvival functions can be deleterious in cancer cells that exploit autophagy to resist treatment. The paper has been cited several thousand times and shaped subsequent autophagy-targeted therapeutics research.
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References cited by this entry
Levine/Kroemer Cell 2008 and Mizushima et al. Nature 2008 are companion foundational reviews of autophagy biology, published months apart. Levine/Kroemer focuses more on disease pathogenesis; Mizushima focuses more on mechanism.
- ExtendsThe effect of fasting or calorie restriction on autophagy induction: A review of the literatureBagherniya M et al. · 2018
Bagherniya 2018 reviews fasting-induced autophagy; Levine/Kroemer 2008 is the disease-context foundation that those fasting protocols intersect with.
Entries that reference this one
Levine/Kroemer 2008 framed autophagy's protective role in disease; Hofer/Madeo 2024 (with Kroemer as senior co-author) identifies spermidine as a translatable molecular handle for inducing the same protective autophagy without fasting.
Mizushima Nature review and Levine/Kroemer Cell review came out the same year covering complementary aspects of the autophagy field; both are foundational citations.
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Not medical advice. This page summarizes primary research. It is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified clinician. See safety for exclusion criteria.