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Drugs 1997 Oct;54(4):511-532

[MEDLINE record in process]

Apoptosis: clinical relevance and pharmacological manipulation.

Thatte U, Dahanukar S

Department of Pharmacology, Seth GS Medical College, Mumbai, India.
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Apoptosis, often synonymously used with the term 'programmed cell
death', is an active, genetically controlled process that
removes unwanted or damaged cells. Suppression, overexpression or
mutation of a number of genes which orchestrate the
apoptotic process are associated with disease. The diseases in which
apoptosis has been implicated can be grouped into 2
broad groups: those in which there is increased cell survival (i.e.
associated with inhibition of apoptosis) and those in which
there is excess cell death (where apoptosis is overactive). Diseases in
which there is an excessive accumulation of cells include
cancer, autoimmune disorders and viral infections. Deprivation of
trophic factors is known to induce apoptosis in cells
dependent on them for survival. This fact has been exploited in the use
of antiandrogens or antiestrogens in the management of
prostate or breast cancer. Haemopoietic growth factors like
granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or
interleukin-3 prevent apoptosis in target cells and modulation of levels
of these factors has been tried in the prevention of
chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression. Until recently, it was thought
that cytotoxic drugs killed target cells directly by
interfering with some life-maintaining function. However, of late, it
has been shown that exposure to several cytotoxic drugs with
disparate mechanisms of action induces apoptosis in both malignant and
normal cells. Physiological regulation of cell death is
essential for the removal of potentially autoreactive lymphocytes during
development and the removal of excess cells after the
completion of an immune response. Recent work has clearly demonstrated
that dysregulation of apoptosis may underlie the
pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases by allowing abnormal autoreactive
lymphocytes to survive. AIDS and neurodegenerative
disorders like Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease represent the most
widely studied group of disorders where an excess of
apoptosis has been implicated. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, retinitis
pigmentosa, epilepsy and alcoholic brain damage are
other neurological disorders in which apoptosis has been implicated.
Apoptosis has been reported to occur in conditions
characterised by ischaemia, e.g. myocardial infarction and stroke. The
liver is a site where apoptosis occurs normally. This
process has also been implicated in a number of liver disorders
including obstructive jaundice. Hepatic damage due to toxins
and drugs is also associated with apoptosis in hepatocytes. Apoptosis
has also been identified as a key phenomenon in some
diseases of the kidney, i.e. polycystic kidney, as well as in disorders
of the pancreas like alcohol-induced pancreatitis and
diabetes.

PMID: 9339959, MUID: 97479878