necroptotic process
A programmed necrotic cell death process which begins when a cell receives a signal (e.g. a ligand binding to a death receptor or to a Toll-like receptor), and proceeds through a series of biochemical events (signaling pathways), characterized by activation of receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 1 and/or 3 (RIPK1/3, also called RIP1/3) and by critical dependence on mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL), and which typically lead to common morphological features of necrotic cell death. The process ends when the cell has died. The process is divided into a signaling phase, and an execution phase, which is triggered by the former.
- Code: GO:0070266
- Source: Gene Ontology
- Alternative labels:
RIPK1-mediated regulated necrosis
TNF-induced necroptosis
necroptosis
programmed necrosis
activation of necroptosis
PARP-dependent cell death
parthanatos
programmed necrotic cell death
activation of necroptosis of activated-T cells
induction of necroptosis of activated-T cells
establishment of necroptosis of activated-T cells
activation of necroptosis by extracellular signals
activation of necroptosis in response to extracellular signals
extracellular signal-induced necroptosis
induction of necroptosis by extracellular signals
induction of necroptosis
establishment of necroptosis
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- Number of publications: 3115
- Number of sentences: 10681
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