Literature DB >> 3123411

Altruistic cell suicide in relation to radiation hormesis.

S Kondo1.   

Abstract

The high radiosensitivity to killing of undifferentiated primordial cells (Bergonié and Tribondeau 1906) can be described as a manifestation of the suicide of injured cells for the benefit of an organism as a whole if their suicide stimulates proliferation of healthy cells to replace them, resulting in complete elimination of injury. This process is called cell-replacement repair, to distinguish it from DNA repair which is rarely complete. 'Cell suicide', 'programmed death' and 'apoptosis' are terms used for the same type of active cell death. Cell suicide is not always altruistic. Altruistic suicide in Drosophila, mice, humans, plants, and E. coli is reviewed in this paper to illustrate its widely different facets. The hypothesis that in animals, radiation hormesis results from altruistic cell suicide is proposed. This hypothesis can explain the hormetic effect of low doses of radiation on the immune system in mice. In contrast, in plants, radiation hormesis seems to be mainly due to non-altruistic cell death. HORMESIS--'the stimulating effect of small doses of substances which in larger doses are inhibitory' (British Medical Dictionary, Caxton Publ. Co., 1961).

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3123411     DOI: 10.1080/09553008814550461

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol Relat Stud Phys Chem Med        ISSN: 0020-7616


  17 in total

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Review 8.  It takes a tissue to make a tumor: epigenetics, cancer and the microenvironment.

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Review 9.  Injury-induced asymmetric cell death as a driving force for head regeneration in Hydra.

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10.  How long can we live?

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