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      Autophagy: The Master of Bulk and Selective Recycling.

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          Abstract

          Plants have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to recycle intracellular constituents, which are essential for developmental and metabolic transitions; for efficient nutrient reuse; and for the proper disposal of proteins, protein complexes, and even entire organelles that become obsolete or dysfunctional. One major route is autophagy, which employs specialized vesicles to encapsulate and deliver cytoplasmic material to the vacuole for breakdown. In the past decade, the mechanics of autophagy and the scores of components involved in autophagic vesicle assembly have been documented. Now emerging is the importance of dedicated receptors that help recruit appropriate cargo, which in many cases exploit ubiquitylation as a signal. Although operating at a low constitutive level in all plant cells, autophagy is upregulated during senescence and various environmental challenges and is essential for proper nutrient allocation. Its importance to plant metabolism and energy balance in particular places autophagy at the nexus of robust crop performance, especially under suboptimal conditions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Annu Rev Plant Biol
          Annual review of plant biology
          Annual Reviews
          1545-2123
          1543-5008
          Apr 29 2018
          : 69
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA; email: rdvierstra@wustl.edu.
          Article
          10.1146/annurev-arplant-042817-040606
          29539270
          191fa2ec-6cd7-4960-b583-7d3a1dd3a18d
          History

          metabolism,proteolysis,ubiquitin,membrane trafficking,vacuole,autophagic receptors

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