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Sharma, A., Anand, S. K., & Singh, N. (2023). AMP-activated protein kinase: An energy sensor and survival mechanism in the reinstatement of metabolic homeostasis. Experimental Cell Research, 428(1), 113614. 
Added by: Dr. Enrique Feoli (12/05/2026, 17:21)   Last edited by: Dr. Enrique Feoli (12/05/2026, 17:23)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2023.113614
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 0014-4827
BibTeX citation key: Sharma2023
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Categories: BioAcyl Corp
Subcategories: Homeostasis
Keywords: AMPK, Autophagy, Cellular stress, Metabolic stress, Mitophagy
Creators: Anand, Sharma, Singh
Collection: Experimental Cell Research
Views: 2/26
Abstract
Cells are programmed to favorably respond towards the nutrient availability by adapting their metabolism to meet energy demands. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a highly conserved serine/threonine energy-sensing kinase. It gets activated upon a decrease in the cellular energy status as reflected by an increased AMP/ATP ratio, ADP, and also during the conditions of glucose starvation without change in the adenine nucelotide ratio. AMPK functions as a centralized regulator of metabolism, acting at cellular and physiological levels to circumvent the metabolic stress by restoring energy balance. This review intricately highlights the integrated signaling pathways by which AMPK gets activated allosterically or by multiple non-canonical upstream kinases. AMPK activates the ATP generating processes (e.g., fatty acid oxidation) and inhibits the ATP consuming processes that are non-critical for survival (e.g., cell proliferation, protein and triglyceride synthesis). An integrated signaling network with AMPK as the central effector regulates all the aspects of enhanced stress resistance, qualified cellular housekeeping, and energy metabolic homeostasis. Importantly, the AMPK mediated amelioration of cellular stress and inflammatory responses are mediated by stimulation of transcription factors such as Nrf2, SIRT1, FoxO and inhibition of NF-κB serving as main downstream effectors. Moreover, many lines of evidence have demonstrated that AMPK controls autophagy through mTOR and ULK1 signaling to fine-tune the metabolic pathways in response to different cellular signals. This review also highlights the critical involvement of AMPK in promoting mitochondrial health, and homeostasis, including mitophagy. Loss of AMPK or ULK1 activity leads to aberrant accumulation of autophagy-related proteins and defective mitophagy thus, connecting cellular energy sensing to autophagy and mitophagy.
Added by: Dr. Enrique Feoli  Last edited by: Dr. Enrique Feoli
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Added by: Dr. Enrique Feoli  Last edited by: Dr. Enrique Feoli
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