Autophagy is a downstream effector of PRR signaling. PAMP, pathogen associated molecular patterns (microbial products, e.g., LPS/endotoxin, peptidoglycan constituents, viral replication intermediates etc.); PRR, pattern recognition receptors (TLR, Toll-like receptors; RLR, RIG-I-like receptors; NLR, Nod-like receptors); PGRP-LE, a Drosophila cytosolic PRR; Dectin, fungal cell wall receptor). Autophagy downstream of PRR can result in direct microbial elimination (e.g., killing of M. tuberculosis) (Delgado et al. 2008; Xu et al. 2007), and increases MHC II-restricted presentation of microbial cytosolic antigens (e.g., EBNA1 protein of EBV) (Paludan et al. 2005). Autophagy has also been shown to deliver TLR ligands to endosomal TLR (e.g., VSV nucleic acids to TLR7), and to play a role in downregulating PRR signaling (e.g., Atg5–Atg12 complex inhibits RIG-I-IPS-1 signaling) (Jounai et al. 2007). Parentheses indicate PRR or processes where the indicated function has not been firmly established