Apoptosis: programmed cell death

authors:

avatar Maryam Honardoost , avatar Horyeh Soleimanjahi 1 , avatar Farzad Rajaei

Tarbiat Modarres University
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how to cite: Honardoost M, Soleimanjahi H, Rajaei F. Apoptosis: programmed cell death. J Inflamm Dis. 2013;17(3):e155769. 

Abstract

  Apoptosis or programmed cell death is known as a conserved gene-directed mechanism for the specific elimination of unnecessary or unwanted cells from an organism and is involved in many immune system mechanisms and diseases . The main differences of this pathway with cell necrosis as two main pathways for elimination of unwanted cells are the absence of inflammation and the restricted effect on target cells. Apoptosis has an important role in biological processes such as normal development, tissue homeostasis, elimination of destroyed cells or virus infected cells and remove of self antigen-activated immune cells. A poptosis is important for regulation of cell growth and proliferation, development and body health and many autoimmune diseases, cancers and viral infections are the result of impaired or inhibited programmed cell death . Therefore the main objective of apoptosis research is to identify molecular components and regulatory mechanisms specially Bcl-2 and IAP family as the most important regulators of apoptosis and this information may lead to application of therapeutic agents that can modulate this process in the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders and proliferative diseases such as cancer.