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- Home | Apoptosis - Springer
Apoptosis is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to basic and clinically-oriented investigations into programmed cell death Stimulates research on the basis of mechanisms of apoptosis and its role in various human disease processes
- Articles | Apoptosis - Springer
Apoptosis is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to basic and clinically-oriented investigations into programmed cell death Stimulates research on the basis of
- Apoptosis: Pathways, Molecules and Beyond | SpringerLink
Diagrammatic representation of various cellular and morphological changes observed during apoptosis Cell death by apoptosis is normal and energy dependent process initiated by cellular damage, stress or number of endogenous and extracellular stimuli
- A cellular danse macabre: the choreography of programmed cell death
Apoptosis and other forms of programmed cell death play a critical role in maintaining cellular homeostasis and defending an organism from infections, cancer, and degenerative diseases
- Major apoptotic mechanisms and genes involved in apoptosis
In this review, we discuss the basic features of apoptosis and have focused on the gene families playing critical roles, activation inactivation mechanisms, upstream downstream effectors, and signaling pathways in apoptosis on the basis of cancer studies
- The critical role of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein . . . - Springer
Apoptosis serves as a protective process to eliminate cells that are damaged, aged, or no longer needed Cancer is characterized by uncontrolled cell proliferation and the evasion of normal regulatory mechanisms, including apoptosis
- Apoptosis - Recent articles and discoveries | SpringerLink
Find the latest research papers and news in Apoptosis Read stories and opinions from top researchers in our research community
- Methods to detect apoptotic cell death | Apoptosis - Springer
Apoptosis is characterized by changes in cellular morphology (shrinkage, blebbing of plasma membrane, formation of apoptotic bodies), nuclear distortions (chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation), and less characteristic cytoplasmic alterations
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