Examples of apoptosis in the following topics:
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- Typically immune cells detect MHC that is present on infected cell surfaces, triggering cytokine release and causing lysis or apoptosis.
- The granzymes then break down the target cell, inducing death by either apoptosis or osmotic cell lysis.
- Natural cytotoxicity receptors directly induce apoptosis after binding to ligands that directly indicate infection of a cell.
- The MHC dependent receptors (described above) use an alternate pathway to induce apoptosis in infected cells.
- Functions of NK cells include: Cytolytic Granule Mediated Cell Apoptosis; Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity (ADCC); Cytokine induced NK and CTL activation; Missing 'self' hypothesis; Tumor cell surveillance; NK cell function in adaptive response; NK cell function in pregnancy; and NK cell evasion by tumor cells .
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- Cytotoxic T cells cause death by apoptosis without using cytokines.
- 1. activating antigen-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes that are able to induce apoptosis in body cells displaying epitopes of foreign antigen on their surface, such as virus-infected cells, cells with intracellular bacteria, and cancer cells displaying tumor antigens
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- This can result from having control of their own growth signals, losing sensitivity to anti-growth signals, and losing the ability to undergo apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
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- Damage to the cell wall disturbs the state of cell electrolytes, which can activate death pathways (apoptosis or programmed cell death).
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- On a microscopic level, this happens with programmed cell death, or apoptosis.
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- Dendritic cells that are defective in apoptosis can lead to inappropriate systemic lymphocyte activation and consequent decline in self-tolerance.
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- This invasion often leads to cell death, in which either the virus directly kills the cell, or the cell self-destructs through apoptosis.
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- B cells that express higher affinity antibodies on their surface will receive a strong survival signal during interactions with other cells, whereas those with lower affinity antibodies will not, and will die by apoptosis.
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- They also limit viral spread by increasing p53 activity, which kills virus-infected cells by promoting apoptosis.
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- The goal of these proteins is threefold: to alter the expression of host proteins necessary for DNA synthesis; to activate other viral genes (such as the virus-encoded DNA polymerase); and to avoid premature death of the infected cell by the host-immune defenses (blockage of apoptosis, blockage of interferon activity, and blockage of MHC class I translocation and expression).