Reactive Oxygen and Apoptosis
Abstract
Apoptosis appears to be a general property of most cells (Vaux 1993), being fundamental for the organization and life span of any organism to control homeostasis and cell populations. Apoptosis is necessary to achieve an adequate balance between sufficient survival of cells and overwhelming proliferation and expansion. This is of particular importance to prevent malignant growth, but it is also necessary to limit expansion of immune cells challenged by pathogens or other stimuli, and as a defense mechanism to remove self-reactive lymphocytes (Wyllie 1980; Arends and Wyllie 1991; Ellis et al. 1991; Raff 1992; Steller 1995). Apoptosis, in contrast to necrosis, is a biochemically active metabolic process (Cohen 1993; Williams and Smith 1993). Cells enter apoptotic pathways as a response to a variety of primary triggers, like the presence or absence of hormonal...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.139-167