“…However, whether the impairment of cathepsin Dmediated apoptotic pathways contributes somehow to the development of both the gastrointestinal and the neuronal pathologic phenotypes is not known, although it seems rather unlikely. Indeed, cathepsin D has been found to play an important role in various pathological conditions, the majority of which affects the CNS, where its contribution seems to be limited to alterations of normal proteolytic processes rather than induction of cell death (Banay-Schwartz et al, 1987;Matus and Green, 1987;Nakanishi et al, 1997). Nonetheless, studies employing cathepsin D-deficient cells, as well as specific pharmacological inhibitors, have demonstrated that cathepsin D is a central mediator of apoptosis induced by several stimuli, such as staurosporine, death receptor-activation, growth factor-deprivation, and oxidative stress (Roberg and Ollinger, 1998;Brunk and Svensson, 1999;Kagedal et al, 2001a;Johansson et al, 2003).…”