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Oncosis: An important non-apoptotic mode of cell death

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND MOLECULAR PATHOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 3, Pages 302-308

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexmp.2012.09.018

Keywords

Cell death; Oncosis; Necrosis; Cardiac pathology; Sanguinarine

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It is now increasingly accepted that apoptosis may not be the only form of cell death seen in vitro and in vivo; hence there is a need to study novel forms of cell death. The explosion of cell death research that followed the recognition of apoptosis by Kerr and colleagues in the late 1960s completely obscured the fact that apoptosis is not the only form of cell death. Apoptosis manifests itself by cell shrinkage followed by breakup; another form (oncosis) is almost the opposite: it involves cell swelling and coagulation of the cytoplasm. The name oncosis was chosen over a century ago by von Recklinghausen, a top collaborator of Rudolph Virchow and thereby one of the founders of cellular pathology. Nevertheless, oncosis was forgotten, largely because a satisfactory technique for preparing tissue sections did not exist at the time. Also confusion developed regarding the distinction between oncosis as a mode of cell injury and cell death, and necrosis as a degradation process following cell death. In this review we have described the many characteristics of oncosis from a morphological and biochemical standpoint, and we briefly examine the application of oncosis in disease processes. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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