Apoptosis in the pathogenesis of renal disease with a focus on tubulointerstitial injury
Contribuinte(s) |
G. Becker R. C. Atkins et al. |
---|---|
Data(s) |
01/01/2002
|
Resumo |
Renal cell apoptosis is important not only in normal physiological conditions of the kidney but also in pathological processes. In normal renal development, it removes unwanted, damaged or harmful cells, and in the healthy adult kidney, it maintains cellular homeostasis by regulating the balance between cell proliferation and cell loss. The apoptotic process has now been described in the pathogenesis and prognosis of certain renal diseases with both beneficial and detrimental roles. It causes deletion of cells intrinsic to the kidney after, for example, toxic, ischaemic, immune or radiation damage, and this loss can be destructive and can cause significant reduction of renal function. In contrast, it can control and limit inflammatory processes in both the acute and chronic phases of renal disease. Information on the positive and negative outcomes of renal cell apoptosis, plus the thousands of publications on more general aspects of apoptosis mechanisms, have now presented real opportunities for the development of therapies that selectively delete or protect certain renal cell populations. This review will discuss some of the more general aspects of renal cell apoptosis and then concentrate on the detrimental or beneficial roles of apoptosis in the initiation, progression or resolution of selected, mainly tubulointerstitial, renal diseases. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Blackwell Publishing Asia |
Palavras-Chave | #Urology & Nephrology #Cell Death #Inflammation #Necrosis #Renal Failure #Renal Fibrosis #Cell-death #Growth-factors #Dna Fragmentation #Bcl-2 Genes #Failure #Rat #Mechanisms #Expression #Kidney #C1 #321012 Nephrology and Urology #730115 Urogenital system and disorders |
Tipo |
Journal Article |