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Classification of Cell Death
The most widely used classification of mammalian cell death recognizes two types: apoptosis and necrosis.3,4,11 Autophagy, which has been proposed as a third mode of cell death, is a process in which cells generate energy and metabolites by digesting their own
Apoptosis
Definition
Death-Receptor Pathway
Mitochondrial Pathway
BCL2 Family
Clinical Implications of Apoptosis
Cancer
The Immune System
Neurologic Diseases
Hepatitis
Cardiovascular Diseases
Sepsis
Autophagy
Definition
Clinical Implications
Cancer
Necrosis
Definition
Mediators of Process
Programmed or Regulated?
Cross-Talk between Cell-Death Mechanisms
Immunomodulatory Effects of Dying Cells
Future Directions
Prevention of Cell Death
Summary
Source Information
From the Departments of Anesthesiology (R.S.H., J.E.M.), Medicine (R.S.H.), and Surgery (R.S.H.), Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis; the Department of Molecular Genetics of Cancer, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, Australia (A.S.); and the Department of Pathology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle (P.E.S.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Hotchkiss at the Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110, or at hotch@wustl.edu.
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