Mechanisms of apoptosis

JC Reed - The American journal of pathology, 2000 - Elsevier
JC Reed
The American journal of pathology, 2000Elsevier
Programmed cell death plays critical roles in a wide variety of physiological processes
during fetal development and in adult tissues. In most cases, physiological cell death occurs
by apoptosis as opposed to necrosis. Defects in apoptotic cell death regulation contribute to
many diseases, including disorders where cell accumulation occurs (cancer, restenosis) or
where cell loss ensues (stroke, heart failure, neurodegeneration, AIDS). In recent years, the
molecular machinery responsible for apoptosis has been elucidated, revealing a family of …
Programmed cell death plays critical roles in a wide variety of physiological processes during fetal development and in adult tissues. In most cases, physiological cell death occurs by apoptosis as opposed to necrosis. Defects in apoptotic cell death regulation contribute to many diseases, including disorders where cell accumulation occurs (cancer, restenosis) or where cell loss ensues (stroke, heart failure, neurodegeneration, AIDS). In recent years, the molecular machinery responsible for apoptosis has been elucidated, revealing a family of intracellular proteases, the caspases, which are responsible directly or indirectly for the morphological and biochemical changes that characterize the phenomenon of apoptosis. Diverse regulators of the caspases have also been discovered, including activators and inhibitors of these cell death proteases. Inputs from signal transduction pathways into the core of the cell death machinery have also been identified, demonstrating ways of linking environmental stimuli to cell death responses or cell survival maintenance. Knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis is providing insights into the causes of multiple pathologies where aberrant cell death regulation occurs and is beginning to provide new approaches to the treatment of human diseases.
Elsevier