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Publication : Hypersensitivity to DNA damage leads to increased apoptosis during early mouse development.

First Author  Heyer BS Year  2000
Journal  Genes Dev Volume  14
Issue  16 Pages  2072-84
PubMed ID  10950870 Mgi Jnum  J:64038
Mgi Id  MGI:1888624 Doi  10.1101/gad.14.16.2072
Citation  Heyer BS, et al. (2000) Hypersensitivity to DNA damage leads to increased apoptosis during early mouse development. Genes Dev 14(16):2072-84
abstractText  Gastrulation in mice is associated with the start of extreme proliferation and differentiation. The potential cost to the embryo of a very rapid proliferation rate is a high production of damaged cells. We demonstrate a novel surveillance mechanism for the elimination of cells damaged by ionizing radiation during mouse gastrulation. During this restricted developmental window, the embryo becomes hypersensitive to DNA damage induced by low dose irradiation (<0.5 Gy) and undergoes apoptosis without cell cycle arrest. Intriguingly, embryonic cells, including germ cell progenitors, but not extraembryonic cells, become hypersensitive to genotoxic stress and undergo Atm- and p53-dependent apoptosis. Thus, hypersensitivity to apoptosis in the early mouse embryo is a cell fate-dependent mechanism to ensure genomic integrity during a period of extreme proliferation and differentiation.
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