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The biochemistry of programmed cell death
Author(s) -
Kroemer Guido,
Petit Patrice,
Zamzami Naoufal,
Vayssière JeanLuc,
Mignotte Bernard
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.9.13.7557017
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , programmed cell death , mitochondrion , effector , apoptosis , biology , cytoplasm , signal transduction , fragmentation (computing) , biochemistry , ecology
Programmed cell death (PCD) is involved in the removal of superfluous and damaged cells in most organ systems. The induction phase of PCD or apoptosis is characterized by an extreme heterogeneity of potential PCD‐triggering signal transduction pathways. During the subsequent effector phase, the numerous PCD‐indueing stimuli converge into a few stereotypical pathways and cells pass a point of no return, thus becoming irreversibly committed to death. It is only during the successive degradation phase that vital structures and functions are destroyed, giving rise to the full‐blown phenotype of PCD. Evidence is accumulating that cytoplasmic structures, including mitochondria, participate in the critical effector stage and that alterations commonly considered to define PCD (apoptotic morphology of the nucleus and regular, oligonucleosomal chromatin fragmentation) have to be ascribed to the late degradation phase. The decision as to whether a cell will undergo PCD or not may be expected to be regulated by “switches” that, once activated, trigger self‐am‐ plificatory metabolic pathways. One of these switches may reside in a perturbation of mitochondrial function. Thus, a decrease in mitochondrial transmem‐ brane potential, followed by mitochondrial uncoupling and generation of reactive oxygen species, precedes nuclear alterations. It appears that molecules that participate in apoptotic decisionmaking also exert functions that are vital for normal cell proliferation and intermediate metabolism.—Kroemer, G., Petit, P., Zamzami, N., Vayssière, J.‐L., Mignotte, B. The biochemistry of programmed cell death. FASEB J. 9, 1277‐1287 (1995)

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