Differential inhibition of radiation-induced apoptosis

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Abstract

The most common mechanism by which radiation kills cells is the induction of DNA double-strand breaks that results in the loss of cell proliferation. Even though apoptosis is increasingly identified in experimental systems in vitro and in vivo, it is still generally regarded as a rare mode of radiation-induced cell kill with minor relevance for the clinical effects of radiation. This review will focus on pro- and antiapoptotic signaling that affects the apoptotic outcome in irradiated mammalian cells. In particular, we will concentrate on the sphingomyelin/ceramide signal transduction pathway which is involved in initiation of stress-induced apoptosis in a variety of normal and neoplastic cells. We will also discuss the crosstalk between the sphingomyelin/ceramide pathway and the protein kinase C pathway which constitutes an antiapoptotic pathway, and the potential for pharmacological modulation to increase the fraction of apoptotic cells undergoing apoptosis after radiation exposure.

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Haimovitz-Friedman, A., Kolesnick, R. N., & Fuks, Z. (1997). Differential inhibition of radiation-induced apoptosis. In Stem Cells (Vol. 15, pp. 43–47). Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/stem.5530150708

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