Authors
Maria Azzopardi, Gianluca Farrugia, Rena Balzan
Publication date
2017/1/1
Source
Mechanisms of ageing and development
Volume
161
Pages
211-224
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Regulation of the cell cycle and apoptosis are two eukaryotic processes required to ensure maintenance of genomic integrity, especially in response to DNA damage. The ease with which yeast, amongst other eukaryotes, can switch from cellular proliferation to cell death may be the result of a common set of biochemical factors which play dual roles depending on the cell’s physiological state. A wide variety of homologues are shared between different yeasts and metazoans and this conservation confirms their importance. This review gives an overview of key molecular players involved in yeast cell-cycle regulation, and those involved in mechanisms which are induced by cell-cycle dysregulation. One such mechanism is autophagy which, depending on the severity and type of DNA damage, may either contribute to the cell’s survival or death. Cell-cycle dysregulation due to checkpoint deficiency leads to mitotic …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Azzopardi, G Farrugia, R Balzan - Mechanisms of ageing and development, 2017