Diverse mechanisms of autophagy dysregulation and their therapeutic implications: does the shoe fit?


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Authors: Sathiyaseelan, P; Rothe, K; Yang, KC; Xu, J; Chow, NS; Bortnik, S; Choutka, C; Ho, C; Jiang, XY; Gorski, SM
Year: 2019
Journal: Autophagy 15   Article Link (DOI)  PubMed
Title: Diverse mechanisms of autophagy dysregulation and their therapeutic implications: does the shoe fit?
Abstract: In its third edition, the Vancouver Autophagy Symposium presented a platform for vibrant discussion on the differential roles of macroautophagy/autophagy in disease. This one-day symposium was held at the BC Cancer Research Centre in Vancouver, BC, bringing together experts in cell biology, protein biochemistry and medicinal chemistry across several different disease models and model organisms. The Vancouver Autophagy Symposium featured 2 keynote speakers that are well known for their seminal contributions to autophagy research, Dr. David Rubinsztein (Cambridge Institute for Medical Research) and Dr. Kay F. Macleod (University of Chicago). Key discussions included the context-dependent roles and mechanisms of dysregulation of autophagy in diseases and the corresponding need to consider context-dependent autophagy modulation strategies. Additional highlights included the differential roles of bulk autophagy versus selective autophagy, novel autophagy regulators, and emerging chemical tools to study autophagy inhibition. Interdisciplinary discussions focused on addressing questions such as which stage of disease to target, which type of autophagy to target and which component to target for autophagy modulation.
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