Autophagy and metabolism. Author Joshua Rabinowitz, Eileen White Publication Year 2010 Type Journal Article Abstract Autophagy is a process of self-cannibalization. Cells capture their own cytoplasm and organelles and consume them in lysosomes. The resulting breakdown products are inputs to cellular metabolism, through which they are used to generate energy and to build new proteins and membranes. Autophagy preserves the health of cells and tissues by replacing outdated and damaged cellular components with fresh ones. In starvation, it provides an internal source of nutrients for energy generation and, thus, survival. A powerful promoter of metabolic homeostasis at both the cellular and whole-animal level, autophagy prevents degenerative diseases. It does have a downside, however--cancer cells exploit it to survive in nutrient-poor tumors. Keywords Animals, Signal Transduction, Humans, Phagosomes, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases, Cell Survival, Starvation, Disease, Proteins, Neoplasms, Energy Metabolism, Homeostasis, Autophagy, Metabolism Journal Science Volume 330 Issue 6009 Pages 1344-8 Date Published 12/2010 Alternate Journal Science Google ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML