Caspase proteases play essential roles in apoptotic cell death, while other proteases are active in necrotic cell death. In a recent paper in Cell, Luke et al. (2007) present findings demonstrating that a gene believed to be a natural protease inhibitor may have a role in preventing necrosis
AbstractCaspase-inhibited cells induced to die may exhibit the traits of either apoptosis or necrosi...
AbstractIntense research into the signaling pathways of apoptosis has revealed a dominant role for p...
AbstractRecent studies have established that members of the caspase protease family are essential co...
AbstractThe morphological features observed by Kerr, Wylie and Currie in 1972 define apoptosis, necr...
AbstractNecrosis has long been described as a consequence of physico-chemical stress and thus accide...
Necrosis is often viewed as an accidental and unregulated cellular event. However, accumulating evid...
AbstractApoptosis, or programmed cell death, is the physiological process whereby individual cells a...
AbstractProgrammed neuronal cell death is required during development to achieve the accurate wiring...
Background on apoptosis Cell death can be achieved by two fundamentally different mechanisms, apopto...
Apoptosis is a carefully orchestrated and tightly controlled form of cell death, conserved across me...
AbstractProgrammed cell death is a distinct genetic and biochemical pathway essential to metazoans. ...
Caspases are a family of evolutionarily conserved cysteine proteases that constitute the effector ar...
AbstractThe morphological features observed by Kerr, Wylie and Currie in 1972 define apoptosis, necr...
AbstractGenes that regulate apoptosis are well defined. In contrast, it has not been clear what gene...
AbstractProteases were, for a long time, mainly considered as protein degrading enzymes. However, in...
AbstractCaspase-inhibited cells induced to die may exhibit the traits of either apoptosis or necrosi...
AbstractIntense research into the signaling pathways of apoptosis has revealed a dominant role for p...
AbstractRecent studies have established that members of the caspase protease family are essential co...
AbstractThe morphological features observed by Kerr, Wylie and Currie in 1972 define apoptosis, necr...
AbstractNecrosis has long been described as a consequence of physico-chemical stress and thus accide...
Necrosis is often viewed as an accidental and unregulated cellular event. However, accumulating evid...
AbstractApoptosis, or programmed cell death, is the physiological process whereby individual cells a...
AbstractProgrammed neuronal cell death is required during development to achieve the accurate wiring...
Background on apoptosis Cell death can be achieved by two fundamentally different mechanisms, apopto...
Apoptosis is a carefully orchestrated and tightly controlled form of cell death, conserved across me...
AbstractProgrammed cell death is a distinct genetic and biochemical pathway essential to metazoans. ...
Caspases are a family of evolutionarily conserved cysteine proteases that constitute the effector ar...
AbstractThe morphological features observed by Kerr, Wylie and Currie in 1972 define apoptosis, necr...
AbstractGenes that regulate apoptosis are well defined. In contrast, it has not been clear what gene...
AbstractProteases were, for a long time, mainly considered as protein degrading enzymes. However, in...
AbstractCaspase-inhibited cells induced to die may exhibit the traits of either apoptosis or necrosi...
AbstractIntense research into the signaling pathways of apoptosis has revealed a dominant role for p...
AbstractRecent studies have established that members of the caspase protease family are essential co...