NUTRIENT REGULATION OF CELL CYCLE PROGRESSION
Bohnsack, Brenda L.; Hirschi, Karen K.; Bohnsack, Brenda L.; Children's Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030; email: brenda.bohnsack@bcm.tmc.edu ; khirschi@bcm.tmc.edu
Журнал:
Annual Review of Nutrition
Дата:
2004
Аннотация:
▪ Abstract Cell replication is tightly controlled in normal tissues and aberrant during disease progression, such as in tumorigenesis. The replication of cells can be divided into four distinct phases: Gap 1 (G1), synthesis (S), gap 2 (G2), and mitosis (M). The progression from one phase to the next is intricately regulated and has many “checkpoints” that take into account cellular status and environmental cues. Among the modulators of cell cycle progression are specific nutrients, which function as energy sources or regulate the production and/or function of proteins needed to advance cells through a replicative cycle. In this review, we focus on the roles of specific nutrients (vitamin A, vitamin D, iron, folic acid, vitamin B12, zinc, and glucose) in the control of cell cycle progression and discuss how insights into the mechanisms by which these nutrients modulate this process can be and have been used to control aberrant cell growth in the treatment of prevalent pathologies.
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