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Senescence and Apoptosis: Architects of Mammalian Development

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.620089

Keywords

apoptosis; development; Hox proteins; retinoblastoma; ING proteins; epigenetics; cancer; senescence

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Mammalian development is a complex process involving cell division, differentiation, death, and aging, with programmed cell death and cellular senescence playing crucial roles in shaping organs and tissues. These processes have dual roles, with potential benefits in early life but contributing to deleterious effects and pathologies later in life.
Mammalian development involves an exquisite choreography of cell division, differentiation, locomotion, programmed cell death, and senescence that directs the transformation of a single cell zygote to a mature organism containing on the order of 40 trillion cells in humans. How a single totipotent zygote undergoes the rapid stages of embryonic development to form over 200 different cell types is complex in the extreme and remains the focus of active research. Processes such as programmed cell death or apoptosis has long been known to occur during development to help sculpt organs and tissue systems. Other processes such as cellular senescence, long thought to only occur in pathologic states such as aging and tumorigenesis have been recently reported to play a vital role in development. In this review, we focus on apoptosis and senescence; the former as an integral mechanism that plays a critical role not only in mature organisms, but that is also essential in shaping mammalian development. The latter as a well-defined feature of aging for which some reports indicate a function in development. We will dissect the dual roles of major gene families, pathways such as Hox, Rb, p53, and epigenetic regulators such as the ING proteins in both early and the late stages and how they play antagonistic roles by increasing fitness and decreasing mortality early in life but contribute to deleterious effects and pathologies later in life.

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