11 research outputs found

    The evolution of diverse biological responses to DNA damage: insights from yeast and p53

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    The cellular response to ionizing radiation provides a conceptual framework for understanding how a yeast checkpoint system, designed to make binary decisions between arrest and cycling, evolved in a way as to allow reversible arrest, senescence or apoptosis in mammals. We propose that the diversity of responses to ionizing radiation in mammalian cells is possible because of the addition of a new regulatory control module involving the tumour-suppressor gene p53. We review the complex mechanisms controlling p53 activity and discuss how the p53 regulatory module enables cells to grow, arrest or die by integrating DNA damage checkpoint signals with the response to normal mitogenic signalling and the aberrant signalling engendered by oncogene activation

    The first 30 years of p53: growing ever more complex

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    RINGs of good and evil: RING finger ubiquitin ligases at the crossroads of tumour suppression and oncogenesis

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    Targeting p53-MDM2-MDMX Loop for Cancer Therapy

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    The DNA Damage Response Mediates Apoptosis and Tumor Suppression

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    The p53-Mdm2 Loop: A Critical Juncture of Stress Response

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