AI Article Synopsis

  • Tissue homeostasis is maintained through a balance of cell proliferation, senescence, and death, with the cell cycle being regulated by cyclin-dependent kinases.
  • Cellular senescence acts as a protective mechanism, limiting the ability of cells to replicate, while apoptosis eliminates damaged or unnecessary cells, particularly during cancer treatments.
  • Research highlights the role of the DNA-damage response network, including the Bcl-2 protein family, in regulating these processes and their complex interactions with cell cycle checkpoints, DNA repair, and cancer therapy responses.

Article Abstract

Tissue homeostasis requires a carefully-orchestrated balance between cell proliferation, cellular senescence and cell death. Cells proliferate through a cell cycle that is tightly regulated by cyclin-dependent kinase activities. Cellular senescence is a safeguard program limiting the proliferative competence of cells in living organisms. Apoptosis eliminates unwanted cells by the coordinated activity of gene products that regulate and effect cell death. The intimate link between the cell cycle, cellular senescence, apoptosis regulation, cancer development and tumor responses to cancer treatment has become eminently apparent. Extensive research on tumor suppressor genes, oncogenes, the cell cycle and apoptosis regulatory genes has revealed how the DNA damage-sensing and -signaling pathways, referred to as the DNA-damage response network, are tied to cell proliferation, cell-cycle arrest, cellular senescence and apoptosis. DNA-damage responses are complex, involving "sensor" proteins that sense the damage, and transmit signals to "transducer" proteins, which, in turn, convey the signals to numerous "effector" proteins implicated in specific cellular pathways, including DNA repair mechanisms, cell-cycle checkpoints, cellular senescence and apoptosis. The Bcl-2 family of proteins stands among the most crucial regulators of apoptosis and performs vital functions in deciding whether a cell will live or die after cancer chemotherapy and irradiation. In addition, several studies have now revealed that members of the Bcl-2 family also interface with the cell cycle, DNA repair/recombination and cellular senescence, effects that are generally distinct from their function in apoptosis. In this review, we report progress in understanding the molecular networks that regulate cell-cycle checkpoints, cellular senescence and apoptosis after DNA damage, and discuss the influence of some Bcl-2 family members on cell-cycle checkpoint regulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1879163PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1631/jzus.2007.B0377DOI Listing

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