Stress, Starvation, and Survival: Autophagy in Action
Stress, Starvation, and Survival: Autophagy in Action
Submitted by Sandhya Sanduja in the Gupta Laboratory at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
Whitehead Institute, MIT Department of Biology, Koch Institute at MIT
When cells are starved for nutrients, they start a ‘self-eating’ process called autophagy. The bright green puncta or autophagosomes as they are called, represent centers inside the cells where cellular components are engulfed and degraded. This provides an internal supply of nutrients and helps cells to survive during starvation. I am studying how autophagy helps cancer cells survive during stress.