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David L. Vaux

The University of Melbourne

ORCID: 0000-0003-2703-1651

Publishes on Cell death mechanisms and regulation, NF-κB Signaling Pathways, Ubiquitin and proteasome pathways. 273 papers and 33.4k citations.

273Publications
33.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The molecular biology of apoptosis.
David L. Vaux, Andreas Strasser|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1996
Cited by 957Open Access

All multicellular organisms have mechanisms for killing their own cells, and use physiological cell death for defence, development, homeostasis, and aging. Apoptosis is a morphologically recognizable form of cell death that is implemented by a mechanism that has been conserved throughout evolution from nematode to man. Thus homologs of the genes that implement cell death in nematodes also do so in mammals, but in mammals the process is considerably more complex, involving multiple isoforms of the components of the cell death machinery. In some circumstances this allows independent regulation of pathways that converge upon a common end point. A molecular understanding of this mechanism may allow design of therapies that either enhance or block cell death at will.