Artículo de revista
Senescence, Apoptosis or Autophagy?
Fecha
2008Registro en:
Gerontology, Vol. 54, N° 2, pp. 92-99, 2008
0304-324X
Autor
Vicencio, José Miguel
Galluzzi, Lorenzo
Tajeddine, Nicolás
Ortiz, Carla
Criollo Céspedes, Alfredo
Tasdemir, E.
Morselli, Eugenia
Ben Younes, Amena
Chiara Maiuri, María
Lavandero González, Sergio
Kroemer, Guido
Institución
Resumen
Many features of aging result from the incapacity of cells to
adapt to stress conditions. When damage accumulates irreversibly,
mitotic cells from renewable tissues rely on either
of two mechanisms to avoid replication. They can permanently
arrest the cell cycle (cellular senescence) or trigger cell
death programs. Apoptosis (self-killing) is the best-described
form of programmed cell death, but autophagy (self-eating),
which is a lysosomal degradation pathway essential for homeostasis,
reportedly contributes to cell death as well. Unlike
mitotic cells, postmitotic cells like neurons or cardiomyocytes
cannot become senescent since they are already
terminally differentiated. The fate of these cells entirely
depends on their ability to cope with stress. Autophagy then
operates as a major homeostatic mechanism to eliminate
damaged organelles, long-lived or aberrant proteins and superfluous
portions of the cytoplasm. In this mini-review, we briefly summarize the molecular networks that allow damaged
cells either to adapt to stress or to engage in programmed-
cell-death pathways.