3.8 Article

Exploding the necroptotic bubble

Journal

CELL STRESS
Volume 1, Issue 2, Pages 107-109

Publisher

SHARED SCIENCE PUBLISHERS OG
DOI: 10.15698/cst2017.11.112

Keywords

necroptosis; phosphatidylserine; cell death; extracellular vesicles; apoptosis; annexin V; phagocytosis; necroptotic bodies; MLKL; RIPK3; RIPK1

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Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [1416/15]
  2. Recanati Foundation (TAU)
  3. Individual research grant Varda and Boaz Dotan Research Center
  4. alpha -1 foundation

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The apoptotic death of cells is accompanied by the exposure of eat-me signals that serve to prevent necrotic degradation of apoptotic cells, and thereby prevent inflammation, promote resolution of immune responses, and stimulate tissue repair. These eat-me signals include the exposure of phosphatidylserine (PS) on the outer plasma membrane during the early stages of apoptosis as well as on the surface of apoptotic bodies, plasma membrane vesicles that are shed during the later stages of cell death. In our recent publication (PLoS Biol. 15(6):e2002711), we describe similar 'eatme' and 'find-me' signals present during necroptosis, challenging some of our common assumptions about regulated forms of lytic death.

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