Necrosis, a regulated mechanism of cell death

Authors

  • María Elena Ramírez Agudelo Universidad de Antioquia
  • Mauricio Rojas López Universidad de Antioquia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.iatreia.11130

Abstract

Three types of cellular death have been defined by morphological and biochemical criteria: apoptosis, necrosis and autophagy. Apoptosis is a regulated cell death, mainly mediated by caspases; autophagy induces degradation of intracellular damaged organelles through the formation of vesicles that fuse with hydrolytic vacuoles.

 

Necrosis has been traditionally defined by the rupture the cytoplasmic membrane with subsequent release of intracellular material, triggering localized inflammatory Intrinsic cellular activities and the events preceding cellular collapse are critical to determine the type of tissue damage.

 

The fact that all three types of cellular death can coexist in any organ and tissue with different availabilities of ATP, suggests that necrosis can be conceived as an active event and that to some extent it may be regulated. Alterations in the structure of proteins and in the activity of different proteases, lipases and nucleases, indicate that each cell may have its own arsenal to trigger the events leading to necrosis. In this article we review some of the evidences on cellular regulation during necrosis.

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Author Biographies

María Elena Ramírez Agudelo, Universidad de Antioquia

Estudiante de Maestría,

Corporación Ciencias Básicas Biomédicas

Mauricio Rojas López, Universidad de Antioquia

Profesor,

Instituto de Investigaciones Médicas

Facultad de Medicina

Published

2012-02-13

How to Cite

1.
Ramírez Agudelo ME, Rojas López M. Necrosis, a regulated mechanism of cell death. Iatreia [Internet]. 2012 Feb. 13 [cited 2025 Dec. 5];23(2):Pág. 166-177. Available from: https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/iatreia/article/view/11130

Issue

Section

Review articles