Abstract
The functional relationship between apoptosis ('self-killing') and autophagy ('self-eating') is complex in the sense that, under certain circumstances, autophagy constitutes a stress adaptation that avoids cell death (and suppresses apoptosis), whereas in other cellular settings, it constitutes an alternative cell-death pathway. Autophagy and apoptosis may be triggered by common upstream signals, and sometimes this results in combined autophagy and apoptosis; in other instances, the cell switches between the two responses in a mutually exclusive manner. On a molecular level, this means that the apoptotic and autophagic response machineries share common pathways that either link or polarize the cellular responses. © 2007 Nature Publishing Group.
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CITATION STYLE
Maiuri, M. C., Zalckvar, E., Kimchi, A., & Kroemer, G. (2007, September). Self-eating and self-killing: Crosstalk between autophagy and apoptosis. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrm2239
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