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Review

Ionizing Radiation-induced Cell Death

Pages 329-341 | Received 02 Sep 1993, Accepted 25 May 1994, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Selected aspects of radiation-induced cell death, connected with signal transduction pathways are reviewed. Cell death is defined as insufficiency of the cellular signal transducing system to maintain the cell's physiological functions. The insufficiency may be due to impaired signal reception and/or transduction, lack or erroneous transcription activation, and eventual cellular ‘misexpression’ of the signal. The molecular basis of this insufficiency would be damage to genomic (but also other cellular) structures and closing of specific signalling pathways or opening of others (like those leading to apoptosis). I describe experimental data that suggest an important role of RAS/NFl and p53/p105 Rb proteins in cell cycle control-coupled responses to DNA damage.

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