| Item Type: | Review | 
|---|---|
| Title: | Oncogene-induced senescence: putting the brakes on tumor development | 
| Creators Name: | Braig, M. and Schmitt, C.A. | 
| Abstract: | Cellular senescence, a permanent cell cycle arrest, is considered a safeguard mechanism that may prevent aged or abnormal cells from further expansion. Although the term ‘‘replicative senescence’’ stands for the widely accepted model of a terminal growth arrest due to telomere attrition, the significance of ‘‘oncogene-inducible senescence’’ remained an issue of debate over the years. A number of recent studies now show the effect of this acute and telomere-independent form of senescence as a tumor-protective, fail-safe mechanism in vivo that shares conceptual and possibly therapeutic similarities with the genetically encoded apoptosis machinery. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(6): 2881-4) | 
| Keywords: | Cell Aging, Neoplastic Cell Transformation, Oncogenes, Precancerous Conditions, Animals | 
| Source: | Cancer Research | 
| ISSN: | 0008-5472 | 
| Publisher: | American Association for Cancer Research | 
| Volume: | 66 | 
| Number: | 6 | 
| Page Range: | 2881-2884 | 
| Date: | 15 March 2006 | 
| Official Publication: | https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-4006 | 
| PubMed: | View item in PubMed | 
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