Abstract
Cells typically respond quickly to stress, altering their metabolism to compensate. In mammalian cells, stress signaling usually leads to either cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis, depending on the severity of the insult and the ability of the cell to recover. Stress also often leads to reorganization of nuclear architecture, reflecting the simultaneous inhibition of major nuclear pathways (e.g., replication and transcription) and activation of specific stress responses (e.g., DNA repair). In this review, we focus on how two nuclear organelles, the nucleolus and the Cajal body, respond to stress. The nucleolus senses stress and is a central hub for coordinating the stress response. We review nucleolar function in…
Citation impact
1,095
total citations
- FWCI
- 21.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 112
Citations per year
Authors
5Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biology
- Nucleolus
- Computational biology
- Genetics
- Evolutionary biology
- Cell biology
- Cytoplasm
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