Current understanding of the mechanisms for clearance of apoptotic cells—a fine balance

LA Hawkins, A Devitt - Journal of cell death, 2013 - journals.sagepub.com
LA Hawkins, A Devitt
Journal of cell death, 2013journals.sagepub.com
Apoptosis is an important cell death mechanism by which multicellular organisms remove
unwanted cells. It culminates in a rapid, controlled removal of cell corpses by neighboring or
recruited viable cells. Whilst many of the molecular mechanisms that mediate corpse
clearance are components of the innate immune system, clearance of apoptotic cells is an
anti-inflammatory process. Control of cell death is dependent on competing pro-apoptotic
and anti-apoptotic signals. Evidence now suggests a similar balance of competing signals is …
Apoptosis is an important cell death mechanism by which multicellular organisms remove unwanted cells. It culminates in a rapid, controlled removal of cell corpses by neighboring or recruited viable cells. Whilst many of the molecular mechanisms that mediate corpse clearance are components of the innate immune system, clearance of apoptotic cells is an anti-inflammatory process. Control of cell death is dependent on competing pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic signals. Evidence now suggests a similar balance of competing signals is central to the effective removal of cells, through so called ‘eat me’ and ‘don't eat me’ signals. Competing signals are also important for the controlled recruitment of phagocytes to sites of cell death. Consequently recruitment of phagocytes to and from sites of cell death can underlie the resolution or inappropriate propagation of cell death and inflammation. This article highlights our understanding of mechanisms mediating clearance of dying cells and discusses those mechanisms controlling phagocyte migration and how inappropriate control may promote important pathologies.
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