apoptosis

(noun)

A type of "cell suicide" called programmed cell death that occurs in multicellular organisms.

Related Terms

  • epiphyseal plate
  • synchondrosis
  • MHC I
  • Histocompatability Complex I
  • Major Histocompatability Complex I
  • memory B cell
  • humoral
  • Clonal selection
  • anergy
  • Cytotoxic T cells

(noun)

A response in which a cell undergoes programmed cell death and its DNA and other components are destroyed completely. It is a mechanism to stop viral infections and cancer development and is a result of cellular stress.

Related Terms

  • epiphyseal plate
  • synchondrosis
  • MHC I
  • Histocompatability Complex I
  • Major Histocompatability Complex I
  • memory B cell
  • humoral
  • Clonal selection
  • anergy
  • Cytotoxic T cells

Examples of apoptosis in the following topics:

  • Natural Killer Cells

    • NK cells use wo cytolytic granule-mediated apoptosis to destroy abnormal and infected cells.
    • Apoptosis is a form of "programmed cell death" in which the cell is stimulated by the cytotoxic mechanisms to destroy itself.
    • Unlike with lysis, apoptosis does not degrade DNA, and cells are destroyed cleanly and completely on their own.
    • In apoptosis, these virus particles are destroyed.
    • However, cancer cells often develop genetic mechanisms to prevent apoptosis signals from occurring, so cell lysis is generally more effective.
  • Cartilaginous Joints: Synchodroses

    • In puberty, increasing levels of estrogen, in both females and males, leads to increased apoptosis of chondrocytes in the epiphyseal plate.
    • Depletion of chondrocytes due to apoptosis leads to less ossification, and growth slows down and later stops when the cartilage has been completely replaced by bone.
  • WBC Function

    • When pathogens are encountered, granule dependent apoptosis (a mechanism of cytotoxicity) may be induced in the pathogen by releasing perforins, granzymes, and proteaseases from their granules.
    • Pathogens that bear the T cell's antigen are destroyed through cytotoxic induced apoptosis and protease activity.
  • Hormonal Regulation of the Male Reproductive System

    • Increasing the levels of FSH increases the production of spermatozoa by preventing the apoptosis of type A spermatogonia.
  • Lymphocytes

    • They function similarly to NK cells by binding to MHC class I and releasing perforin, granzymes, and proteases to induce apoptosis in a pathogen.
    • Instead of apoptosis, though, defective B cells are killed through other mechanisms such as clonal deletion.
  • Graft Rejection and Tissue Typing

    • Rejection is an adaptive immune response via cellular immunity (mediated by killer T cells inducing apoptosis of target cells) as well as humoral immunity (mediated by activated B cells secreting antibody molecules), though the action is joined by components of innate immune response (phagocytes and soluble immune proteins).
  • RBC Life Cycle

    • Eryptosis, a form of apoptosis (programmed cell death), is the aging and death of mature RBCs.
  • Types of Cytokines Participating in Immune Response

    • Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) are cytokines that induce apoptosis in abnormal cells such as tumor cells.
  • Types of Adaptive Immunity

    • Then T-cell produced proteases enter the pathogen and induce an apoptosis response within the cell.
  • Development of the Skeleton

    • The hypertrophic chondrocytes (before apoptosis) secrete vascular endothelial cell growth factor, which induces the sprouting of blood vessels from the perichondrium.
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