28 research outputs found
Sustained Local Delivery of Structurally Diverse HIV-1 Microbicides Released from Sublimation Enthalpy Controlled Matrices
Understanding the conservation patterns and molecular phylogenetics of human death receptors family through computational biology
Apoptosis overrides survival signals through a caspase-mediated dominant-negative NF-κB loop
Cytokine and Nitric Oxide Levels in Patients with Sepsis – Temporal Evolvement and Relation to Platelet Mitochondrial Respiratory Function
Necroptosis, necrosis and secondary necrosis converge on similar cellular disintegration features
Necroptosis, necrosis and secondary necrosis following apoptosis represent different modes of cell death that eventually result in similar cellular morphology including rounding of the cell, cytoplasmic swelling, rupture of the plasma membrane and spilling of the intracellular content. Subcellular events during tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced necroptosis, H2O2-induced necrosis and anti-Fas-induced secondary necrosis were studied using high-resolution time-lapse microscopy. The cellular disintegration phase of the three types of necrosis is characterized by an identical sequence of subcellular events, including oxidative burst, mitochondrial membrane hyperpolarization, lysosomal membrane permeabilization and plasma membrane permeabilization, although with different kinetics. H2O2-induced necrosis starts immediately by lysosomal permeabilization. In contrast, during TNF-mediated necroptosis and anti-Fas-induced secondary necrosis, this is a late event preceded by a defined signaling phase. TNF-induced necroptosis depends on receptor-interacting protein-1 kinase, mitochondrial complex I and cytosolic phospholipase A(2) activities, whereas H2O2-induced necrosis requires iron-dependent Fenton reactions
