DNA damage and cell cycle checkpoints

WK Kaufmann, RS Paules - The FASEB Journal, 1996 - Wiley Online Library
WK Kaufmann, RS Paules
The FASEB Journal, 1996Wiley Online Library
DNA is prone to numerous forms of damage that can injure cells and impair fitness. Cells
have evolved an array of mechanisms to repair these injuries. Proliferating cells are
especially vulnerable to DNA damage due to the added demands of cellular growth and
division. Cell cycle checkpoints represent integral components of DNA repair that coordinate
cooperation between the machinery of the cell cycle and several biochemical pathways that
respond to damage and restore DNA structure. By delaying progression through the cell …
DNA is prone to numerous forms of damage that can injure cells and impair fitness. Cells have evolved an array of mechanisms to repair these injuries. Proliferating cells are especially vulnerable to DNA damage due to the added demands of cellular growth and division. Cell cycle checkpoints represent integral components of DNA repair that coordinate cooperation between the machinery of the cell cycle and several biochemical pathways that respond to damage and restore DNA structure. By delaying progression through the cell cycle, checkpoints provide more time for repair before the critical phases of DNA replication, when the genome is replicated, and of mitosis, when the genome is segregated. Loss or attenuation of checkpoint function may increase spontaneous and induced gene mutations and chromosomal aberrations by reducing the efficiency of DNA repair. Defects in checkpoint control have been seen in certain hereditary cancer syndromes and at early stages of cell transformation. Mutations in checkpoint control genes therefore may contribute to the genetic instability that appears to drive neoplastic evolution.—Kaufmann, W. K., Paules, R. S. DNA damage and cell cycle checkpoints. FASEB J. 10, 238‐247 (1996)
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