Term: liver necroptotic process
Note: This page represents a term created by the combination ("post-composition") of two ontology terms. For more information on the individual terms, click the hyperlinked name.
Name: liver
Synonyms:
Definition: Solid compound organ with three lobes that has many functions including bile production, blood detoxification, the production of critical plasma proteins and clotting factors, complement proteins and the storage of many substances, such as lipids, amino acids, iron, and glycogen. Female fish produce vitellogenins in the liver.
Ontology: Anatomy Ontology [ZFA:0000123]
Name: necroptotic process
Synonyms: activation of necroptosis, activation of necroptosis by extracellular signals, activation of necroptosis in response to extracellular signals, activation of necroptosis of activated-T cells, establishment of necroptosis, establishment of necroptosis of activated-T cells, extracellular signal-induced necroptosis, induction of necroptosis, induction of necroptosis by extracellular signals, induction of necroptosis of activated-T cells, necroptosis, PARP-dependent cell death, parthanatos, programmed necrosis, programmed necrotic cell death, RIPK1-mediated regulated necrosis, TNF-induced necroptosis
Definition: 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.
Ontology: GO: Biological Process [GO:0070266]    QuickGO    AmiGO