Milos Mandic, Maja Misirkic Marjanovic, Kristina Janjetovic, Mihajlo Bosnjak, Ljubica Harhaji-Trajkovic, Vladimir Trajkovic, Ljubica Vucicevic
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Multifaceted role of AMPK in autophagy: more than a simple trigger?
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a key sensor and regulator of intracellular energy balance. During energy stress, AMPK helps restore cellular ATP levels by preventing anabolic and promoting catabolic processes, such as autophagy. AMPK activates autophagy both post-translationally and transcriptionally, by suppressing the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 activity and stimulating the activation of unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase (ULK), autophagosome-lysosome fusion, and expression of autophagy-related genes. Recent research, however, suggests an unexpected role of AMPK in energy stress, where AMPK inhibits ULK and suppresses ATP-consuming autophagic response, possibly to save energy and maintain the autophagic machinery for subsequent activation once the stress subsides. The present review elucidates this dual nature of AMPK in autophagy regulation while highlighting its molecular mechanisms and importance for therapeutic approaches involving AMPK modulation.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology is dedicated to innovative approaches to the study of cell and molecular physiology. Contributions that use cellular and molecular approaches to shed light on mechanisms of physiological control at higher levels of organization also appear regularly. Manuscripts dealing with the structure and function of cell membranes, contractile systems, cellular organelles, and membrane channels, transporters, and pumps are encouraged. Studies dealing with integrated regulation of cellular function, including mechanisms of signal transduction, development, gene expression, cell-to-cell interactions, and the cell physiology of pathophysiological states, are also eagerly sought. Interdisciplinary studies that apply the approaches of biochemistry, biophysics, molecular biology, morphology, and immunology to the determination of new principles in cell physiology are especially welcome.