Gene interactions and pathways from curated databases and text-mining
Autophagy 2007, PMID: 17457036

AMP-activated protein kinase: a universal regulator of autophagy?

Høyer-Hansen, Maria; Jäättelä, Marja

Autophagy is a lysosomal pathway involved in the turnover of cellular macromolecules and organelles. Starvation and various other stresses increase autophagic activity above the low basal levels observed in unstressed cells, where it is kept down by mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1). In starved cells, LKB1 activates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) that inhibits mTORC1 activity via a pathway involving tuberous sclerosis complex 1 and 2 (TSC1/2) and its substrate Rheb. The present study suggests hat AMPK inhibits mTORC1 and autophagy also in nonstarved cells. Various Ca(2+) mobilizing agents (vitamin D compounds, thapsigargin, ATP and ionomycin) activate MPK via activation of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase kinase-beta (CaMKK-beta), and his pathway is required for Ca(2+)-induced autophagy. Thus, we propose that an increase in free cytosolic Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](c)) induces autophagy via the CaMKK/beta-AMPK-TSC1/2-Rheb-mTORC1 signaling pathway and that AMPK is a more general regulator of autophagy than previously expected.

Diseases/Pathways annotated by Medline MESH: Calcium Signaling
Document information provided by NCBI PubMed

Text Mining Data

AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK) → LKB1: " In starved cells, LKB1 activates AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK) that inhibits mTORC1 activity via a pathway involving tuberous sclerosis complex 1 and 2 ( TSC1/2 ) and its substrate Rheb "

mTORC1 ⊣ AMPK: " The present study suggests hat AMPK inhibits mTORC1 and autophagy also in nonstarved cells "

Manually curated Databases

No curated data.