The hammer and the dance of cell cycle control
Autor
Panagopoulos, Andreas
Altmeyer, Matthias
Institución
Resumen
Cell cycle checkpoints secure ordered progression from one cell cycle phase
to the next. They are important to signal cell stress and DNA lesions and to
stop cell cycle progression when severe problems occur. Recent work suggests,
however, that the cell cycle control machinery responds in more subtle and
sophisticated ways when cells are faced with naturally occurring challenges,
such as replication impediments associated with endogenous replication stress.
Instead of following a stop and go approach, cells use fine-tuned deceleration
and brake release mechanisms under the control of ataxia telangiectasia and
Rad3-related protein kinase (ATR) and checkpoint kinase 1 (CHK1) to more flexibly adapt their cell cycle program to changing conditions. We highlight emerging
examples of such intrinsic cell cycle checkpoint regulation and discuss their
physiological and clinical relevance.