Death penalty for keratinocytes: Apoptosis versus cornification

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Abstract

Homeostasis implies a balance between cell growth and cell death. This balance is essential for the development and maintenance of multicellular organisms. Homeostasis is controlled by several mechanisms including apoptosis, a process by which cells condemned to death are completely eliminated. However, in some cases, total destruction and removal of dead cells is not desirable, as when they fulfil a specific function such as formation of the skin barrier provided by corneocytes, also known as terminally differentiated keratinocytes. In this case, programmed cell death results in accumulation of functional cell corpses. Previously, this process has been associated with apoptotic cell death. In this overview, we discuss differences and similarities in the molecular regulation of epidermal programmed cell death and apoptosis. We conclude that despite earlier confusion, apoptosis and cornification occur through distinct molecular pathways, and that possibly antiapoptotic mechanisms are implicated in the terminal differentiation of keratinocytes. © 2005 Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Lippens, S., Denecker, G., Ovaer, P., Vandenabeele, P., & Declercq, W. (2005). Death penalty for keratinocytes: Apoptosis versus cornification. Cell Death and Differentiation, 12, 1497–1508. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cdd.4401722

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