Apoptosis is a morphologically stereotyped form of cell death, prevalent in multicellular organisms, by which single cells are deleted from the midst of living tissues. Recognition of the cellular corpses and their removal by phagocytosis occurs without disturbance to tissue architecture or function and without initiating inflammation. Apoptosis is regulable and is of fundamental importance to tissue development and homeostasis. Cellular susceptibility to apoptosis is determined by a variety of signals, of both extracellular and internal origin, including proliferative status. Dysregulated apoptosis is important in the pathogenesis of several important human diseases including neoplasia, and recognition of the defects involved is prompting ...
1. It is feasible to categorize most if not all dying cells into one or the other of two morphologic...
The term apoptosis has been coined for a morphologically distinctive mode of cell death, which plays...
The term apoptosis first appeared in the biomedical literature in 1972, to delineate a structurally ...
Apoptosis is a morphologically stereotyped form of cell death, prevalent in multicellular organisms,...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Many studies have led to the identification of molecules involved in the signaling to cell death and...
The health of multicellular organism depends not only on the body's ability to produce new cells but...
Contrary to what might be common sense, the ordered development and maintenance of multicellular org...
Apoptosis is a morphologically and biochemically distinct mode of cell death that uses the cell’s ow...
Apoptosis is a programmed cell death which occurs following a variety of stimuli. Physiologically th...
Cell death takes two distinct forms, necrosis and apoptosis. Necrosis is a degenerative phenomenon t...
Apoptosis is a programmed cell death which occurs following a variety of stimuli. Physiologically th...
Apoptosis, a form of programmed cell death, is used to eliminate individual cells surrounded by norm...
1. It is feasible to categorize most if not all dying cells into one or the other of two morphologic...
The term apoptosis has been coined for a morphologically distinctive mode of cell death, which plays...
The term apoptosis first appeared in the biomedical literature in 1972, to delineate a structurally ...
Apoptosis is a morphologically stereotyped form of cell death, prevalent in multicellular organisms,...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Apoptosis, a genetically regulated form of cell death with distinct biochemical and morphological fe...
Many studies have led to the identification of molecules involved in the signaling to cell death and...
The health of multicellular organism depends not only on the body's ability to produce new cells but...
Contrary to what might be common sense, the ordered development and maintenance of multicellular org...
Apoptosis is a morphologically and biochemically distinct mode of cell death that uses the cell’s ow...
Apoptosis is a programmed cell death which occurs following a variety of stimuli. Physiologically th...
Cell death takes two distinct forms, necrosis and apoptosis. Necrosis is a degenerative phenomenon t...
Apoptosis is a programmed cell death which occurs following a variety of stimuli. Physiologically th...
Apoptosis, a form of programmed cell death, is used to eliminate individual cells surrounded by norm...
1. It is feasible to categorize most if not all dying cells into one or the other of two morphologic...
The term apoptosis has been coined for a morphologically distinctive mode of cell death, which plays...
The term apoptosis first appeared in the biomedical literature in 1972, to delineate a structurally ...