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    Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1994 Aug 30;345(1313):265-8.

    Programmed cell death and the control of cell survival.

    Raff MC, Barres BA, Burne JF, Coles HS, Ishizaki Y, Jacobson MD.

    MRC Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology, University College London, U.K.

    We draw the following tentative conclusions from our studies on programmed cell death (PCD): (i) the amount of normal cell death in mammalian development is still underestimated; (ii) most mammalian cells constitutively express the proteins required to undergo PCD; (iii) the death programme operates by default when a mammalian cell is deprived of signals from other cells; (iv) many normal cell deaths may occur because cells fail to obtain the extracellular signals they need to suppress the death programme; and (v) neither the nucleus nor mitochondrial respiration is required for PCD (or Bcl-2 protection from PCD), raising the possibility that the death programme, like mitosis, is orchestrated by a cytosolic regulator that acts on multiple organelles in parallel.

    PMID: 7846124 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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