4.7 Review

Cell cycle control in cancer

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 74-88

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41580-021-00404-3

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Funding

  1. MRC-UCL University Unit [MC_EX_G0800785]
  2. Cancer Research UK Programme Foundation Award
  3. CRUK-EPSRC Multidisciplinary Project [C1529/A23335]

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This review highlights the importance of cell cycle regulation in preventing genetic errors and cell proliferation, and how disruption of these mechanisms is associated with cancer development. Cancer arises from continuous cell division and evasion of cell cycle control mechanisms.
This Review discusses our current understanding of cell cycle regulation, the functions of cell cycle checkpoints and how disruption of these finely tuned mechanisms is associated with cancer. Insights into these regulatory mechanisms are creating new opportunities for the treatment of cancer. Cancer is a group of diseases in which cells divide continuously and excessively. Cell division is tightly regulated by multiple evolutionarily conserved cell cycle control mechanisms, to ensure the production of two genetically identical cells. Cell cycle checkpoints operate as DNA surveillance mechanisms that prevent the accumulation and propagation of genetic errors during cell division. Checkpoints can delay cell cycle progression or, in response to irreparable DNA damage, induce cell cycle exit or cell death. Cancer-associated mutations that perturb cell cycle control allow continuous cell division chiefly by compromising the ability of cells to exit the cell cycle. Continuous rounds of division, however, create increased reliance on other cell cycle control mechanisms to prevent catastrophic levels of damage and maintain cell viability. New detailed insights into cell cycle control mechanisms and their role in cancer reveal how these dependencies can be best exploited in cancer treatment.

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