DNA Damage Responses: p53 Induction, Cell Cycle Perturbations, and Apoptosis

  1. C.E. Canman,
  2. C.-Y. Chen,
  3. M.-H. Lee, and
  4. M.B. Kastan
  1. The Johns Hopkins Oncology Center, Baltimore, Maryland 21287

This extract was created in the absence of an abstract.

Excerpt

Epidemiology studies have suggested that exposure to DNA-damaging agents contributes to the development of at least 80% of human cancers (Doll and Peto 1981). Therefore, understanding the various steps involved in controlling cellular responses to DNA-damaging agents is an important component to understanding mechanisms involved in human tumorigenesis. There are three potential outcomes for cells following exposure to DNA-damaging agents (Fig. 1): (1) The cell repairs the DNA damage in a timely fashion so that subsequent progression through the cell cycle results in normal daughter cells; (2) the cell dies, and therefore cannot go on to become a tumor cell; and (3) the damage results in permanent genetic alterations in the cell which are then passed on to subsequent daughter cells. When the appropriate combination of genetic

[Graphics Excised]. Schematic representation of significant steps in the cellular responses to DNA damage and their potential contributions to tumorigenesis. Either exogenous or...

| Table of Contents