Home

Apoptosisinducing

Apoptosis-inducing refers to any molecule, protein, gene product, or form of cellular stress that initiates apoptotic cell death, a controlled process that eliminates damaged or unwanted cells. Apoptosis is essential for development, immune regulation, and tissue homeostasis, and its dysregulation is linked to cancer, neurodegeneration, and autoimmune disorders.

Apoptosis can be activated by two main pathways that converge on a common execution phase. The intrinsic,

In research and therapy, apoptosis-inducing agents are used to eliminate harmful cells. Examples include DNA-damaging chemotherapeutics

or
mitochondrial,
pathway
is
triggered
by
cellular
stress
such
as
DNA
damage,
oxidative
stress,
or
nutrient
deprivation.
This
leads
to
mitochondrial
outer
membrane
permeabilization,
release
of
cytochrome
c,
formation
of
the
apoptosome,
and
activation
of
caspase-9,
followed
by
effector
caspases.
The
intrinsic
pathway
is
regulated
by
Bcl-2
family
proteins,
including
pro-apoptotic
Bax
and
Bak
and
anti-apoptotic
Bcl-2
and
Bcl-xL.
The
extrinsic,
or
death
receptor,
pathway
is
initiated
by
ligands
such
as
Fas
ligand
and
TRAIL
binding
to
death
receptors
(Fas/CD95,
DR4/DR5),
triggering
caspase-8
activation
and
subsequent
downstream
caspases.
Cross-talk
exists
between
pathways,
for
example
via
Bid
cleavage.
and
radiation
that
promote
p53-dependent
apoptosis,
TRAIL
receptor
agonists,
and
BH3
mimetics
that
inhibit
anti-apoptotic
Bcl-2
family
proteins.
While
these
agents
can
be
effective
against
cancer
cells,
resistance
mechanisms
such
as
upregulation
of
anti-apoptotic
proteins,
loss
of
pro-apoptotic
factors,
or
mutations
in
signaling
components
can
limit
efficacy.
Safety
concerns
include
potential
damage
to
normal
tissues
and
unintended
cell
loss.