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Autophagy: Cancer, Other Pathologies, Inflammation, Immunity, Infection, and Aging
Volume 5 - Role in Human Diseases

Presents up-to-date information on the role of autophagy in health and disease

M. A. Hayat (Edited by)

9780128010334, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 30 September 2014

338 pages
23.4 x 19 x 2.4 cm, 0.92 kg

Understanding the importance and necessity of the role of autophagy in health and disease is vital for the studies of cancer, aging, neurodegeneration, immunology, and infectious diseases. Comprehensive and up-to-date, this book offers a valuable guide to these cellular processes whilst inciting researchers to explore their potentially important connections.

Volume 5 comprehensively describes the role of autophagy in human diseases, delivering coverage of the antitumor and protumor roles of autophagy; the therapeutic inhibition of autophagy in cancer; and the duality of autophagy’s effects in various cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurodegenerative disorders. In spite of the increasing importance of autophagy in the various pathophysiological conditions mentioned above, this process remains underestimated and overlooked. As a consequence, its role in the initiation, stability, maintenance, and progression of these and other diseases remains poorly understood.

This book is an asset to newcomers as a concise overview of the diverse disease implications of autophagy, while serving as an excellent reference for more experienced scientists and clinicians looking to update their knowledge.

Volumes in the Series

Volume 1: Molecular Mechanisms. Elucidates autophagy’s association with numerous biological processes, including cellular development and differentiation, cancer, immunity, infectious diseases, inflammation, maintenance of homeostasis, response to cellular stress, and degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson's, Huntington's, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and prion diseases. Volume 2: Role in General Diseases. Describes the various aspects of the complex process of autophagy in a myriad of devastating human diseases, expanding from a discussion of essential autophagic functions into the role of autophagy in proteins, pathogens, immunity, and general diseases. Volume 3: Role in Specific Diseases. Explores the role of autophagy in specific diseases and developments, including: Crohn’s Disease, Gaucher Disease, Huntington’s Disease, HCV infection, osteoarthritis, and liver injury, with a full section devoted to in-depth exploration of autophagy in tumor development and cancer, as well as the relationship between autophagy and apoptosis.Volume 4: Mitophagy. Presents detailed information on the role of mitophagy, the selective autophagy of mitochondria, in health and disease, by delivering an in-depth treatment of the molecular mechanisms involved in mitophagy initiation and execution, as well as the role of mitophagy in Parkinson Disease, cardiac aging, and skeletal muscle atrophy. Volume 5: Role in Human Diseases. Comprehensively describes the role of autophagy in human diseases, delivering coverage of the antitumor and protumor roles of autophagy; the therapeutic inhibition of autophagy in cancer; and the duality of autophagy’s effects in various cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurodegenerative disorders.Volume 6: Regulation of Autophagy and Selective Autophagy. Provides coverage of the mechanisms of regulation of autophagy; intracellular pathogen use of the autophagy mechanism; the role of autophagy in host immunity; and selective autophagy. Volume 7: Role of Autophagy in Therapeutic Applications. Provides coverage of the latest developments in autophagosome biogenesis and regulation; the role of autophagy in protein quality control; the role of autophagy in apoptosis; autophagy in the cardiovascular system; and the relationships between autophagy and lifestyle. Volume 8: Autophagy and Human Diseases. Reviews recent advancements in the molecular mechanisms underlying a large number of genetic and epigenetic diseases and abnormalities, and introduces new, more effective therapeutic strategies, in the development of targeted drugs and programmed cell death, providing information that will aid on preventing detrimental inflammation.Volume 9: Necrosis and Inflammation in Human Diseases. Emphasizes the role of Autophagy in necrosis and inflammation, explaining in detail the molecular mechanism(s) underlying the formation of autophagosomes, including the progression of Omegasomes to autophagosomes.

I. General Applications

Chapter 1. Introduction; M. A. Hayat

II. Role of Autophagy in Cancer

Chapter 2. Molecular Crosstalk between the Autophagy and Apoptotic Networks in Cancer; James Driscoll

Chapter 3. Inhibition of ERBB Receptors and Autophagy in Cancer Therapy; Ronit Pinkas-Kramarski

Chapter 4. Ginsenoside F2 Initiates an Autophagic Progression in Breast Cancer Stem Cells; Somi Kim Cho

Chapter 5. Role of Autophagy in Cancer Therapy; Ricardo Gargini

Chapter 6. Autophagy in Human Brain Cancer. Therapeutic Implications; Clelia Miracco

Chapter 7. Blockage of Lysosomal Degradation is Detrimental to Cancer Cells' Survival: Role of Autophagy Activation; Jessica L. Schwartz-Roberts

Chapter 8. Induction of Protective Autophagy in Cancer cells by an NAE Inhibitor MLN4924; Yi Sun

Chapter 9. Effect of Autophagy on Chemotherapy-induced Apoptosis and Growth Inhibition; Shanshan Zhang

Chapter 10. Autophagy Upregulation Reduces Doxorubicin-induced Cardiotoxicity; Balindiwe J.N. Sishi

III. Role of Autophagy in Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Neurodegenerative Diseases

Chapter 11. Autophagy in Critical Illness; Rajesh K. Aneja

Chapter 12. Autophagy in the Onset of Atrial Fibrillation; Rodrigo Troncoso

Chapter 13. Role of Autophagy in Atherogenesis; Peggy Robinet

Chapter 14. Regulation of Autophagy in Insulin Resistance and Type 2 Diabetes; Monika Cahova

Chapter 15. Pancreatic Beta Cell Autophagy and Islet Transplantation; Subbiah Pugazhenthi

Chapter 16. Autophagy Guards against Immunosuppression and Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Renal Transplantation; Yoshitaka Isaka

Chapter 17. When the Good Turns Bad: Challenges in the Targeting of Autophagy in Neurodegenerative Diseases; Melissa Nassif

Chapter 18. The a-Tubulin Deacetylase HDAC6 in Aggresome formation and autophagy: Implications for neurodegeneration; Christiane Richter-Landsberg

Subject Areas: Cellular biology [cytology PSF], Cytopathology [MMFC], Immunology [MJCM], Cytology [MFCC]

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