Apoptosis plays an important role during development and in the maintenance of multicellular organisms. Bcl-2 family members affect cell death in either a positive or negative fashion. Although some redundancy exists between family members, expression of certain family members is important during development in an organ-specific manner. The founding family member bcl-2 tends to be highly expressed in the embryo and declines postnatally following differentiation and maturation. Altered expression of bcl-2, as well as other family members, has been observed in disease states potentially affecting treatment modalities. Here we examine the distribution and role death repressors bcl-2, bcl-x(L) and bcl-w as well as death effectors bax and bak play regulating apoptosis in a tissue-specific manner. Understanding the normal role of these proteins during embryogenesis and in the mature organ will give us important insight into what goes awry in various disease states.