Frontiers in Cell Death is delighted to present the ‘Reviews in’ series of article collections.
This topic in Cellular Stress and Survival will publish high-quality review articles on the various aspects of cellular physiology that impact the survival of a cell. It aims to highlight recent advances in the field, whilst emphasizing important directions and new possibilities for future inquiries.
Areas covered include:
• Role of homeostatic cellular processes in regulating molecules in cell death pathways and the effect of perturbing these processes in diseases. These processes include but not limited to cell cycle, ER quality control, autophagy, bioenergetics, and nuclei acids metabolism.
• Intersection between growth factor, cytokine and chemokine signaling with the death-signaling machinery via direct post-translational regulation or secondary to changes in gene expression.
• New and emerging bioactive molecules that directly impact survival responses or secondary to their regulation of other cellular processes and signaling pathways.
• Effect of cell-to-cell interaction, cellular motility, and cytoskeletal changes on cell survival.
• Regulation of cellular survival during acute and latent infections by microbes.
• Translation of omics data to biochemical function during homeostatic and disease states.
Studies should provide mechanistic insights into how multiple inputs are integrated to determine cell fate.
The Reviews in Cellular Stress and Survival collection welcomes full-length, mini or systematic review papers. New articles will be added to this collection as they are published.
Keywords:
Pathways, Homeostatic Processes, Bioactive Molecules, Cell Interactions, Omics, Review Articles, cell survival, cellular stress
Important Note:
All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.
Frontiers in Cell Death is delighted to present the ‘Reviews in’ series of article collections.
This topic in Cellular Stress and Survival will publish high-quality review articles on the various aspects of cellular physiology that impact the survival of a cell. It aims to highlight recent advances in the field, whilst emphasizing important directions and new possibilities for future inquiries.
Areas covered include:
• Role of homeostatic cellular processes in regulating molecules in cell death pathways and the effect of perturbing these processes in diseases. These processes include but not limited to cell cycle, ER quality control, autophagy, bioenergetics, and nuclei acids metabolism.
• Intersection between growth factor, cytokine and chemokine signaling with the death-signaling machinery via direct post-translational regulation or secondary to changes in gene expression.
• New and emerging bioactive molecules that directly impact survival responses or secondary to their regulation of other cellular processes and signaling pathways.
• Effect of cell-to-cell interaction, cellular motility, and cytoskeletal changes on cell survival.
• Regulation of cellular survival during acute and latent infections by microbes.
• Translation of omics data to biochemical function during homeostatic and disease states.
Studies should provide mechanistic insights into how multiple inputs are integrated to determine cell fate.
The Reviews in Cellular Stress and Survival collection welcomes full-length, mini or systematic review papers. New articles will be added to this collection as they are published.
Keywords:
Pathways, Homeostatic Processes, Bioactive Molecules, Cell Interactions, Omics, Review Articles, cell survival, cellular stress
Important Note:
All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.