Cell cycle and apoptosis: Common pathways to life and death

Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, is a highly regulated process used to eliminate unwanted or damaged cells from multicellular organisms. The morphology of cells undergoing apoptosis is similar to cells undergoing both normal mitosis and an aberrant form of mitosis called mitotic catastrophe. Dur...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cellular biochemistry 1995-06, Vol.58 (2), p.175-180
Hauptverfasser: King, Karen L., Cidlowski, John A.
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description Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, is a highly regulated process used to eliminate unwanted or damaged cells from multicellular organisms. The morphology of cells undergoing apoptosis is similar to cells undergoing both normal mitosis and an aberrant form of mitosis called mitotic catastrophe. During each of these processes, cells release substrate attachments, lose cell volume, condense their chromatin, and disassemble the nuclear lamina. The morphological similarities among cells undergoing these processes suggest that the underlying biochemical changes also may be related. The susceptibility of cells to apoptosis frequently depends on the differentiation state of the cell. Additionally, cell cycle checkpoints appear to link the cell cycle to apoptosis. Deregulation of the cell cycle components has been shown to induce mitotic catastrophe and also may be involved in triggering apoptosis. Some apoptotic cells express abnormal levels of cell cycle proteins and often contain active Cdc2, the primary kinase active during mitosis. Although cell cycle components may not be involved in all forms of apoptosis, in many instances cell proliferation and cell death may share common pathways.
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subjects Animals
apoptosis
Apoptosis - physiology
Cdc2
CDC2 Protein Kinase - physiology
Cell Cycle - physiology
cell cycle components
Cell Differentiation - physiology
Humans
mitosis
Mitosis - physiology
mitotic catastrophe
title Cell cycle and apoptosis: Common pathways to life and death
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