A programmed cell death process which begins when a cell receives an internal (e.g. DNA damage) or external signal (e.g. an extracellular death ligand), and proceeds through a series of biochemical events (signaling pathway phase) which trigger an execution phase. The execution phase is the last step of an apoptotic process, and is typically characterized by rounding-up of the cell, retraction of pseudopodes, reduction of cellular volume (pyknosis), chromatin condensation, nuclear fragmentation (karyorrhexis), plasma membrane blebbing and fragmentation of the cell into apoptotic bodies. When the execution phase is completed, the cell has died. [ GOC:go_curators GOC:dhl GOC:cjm GOC:ecd GOC:tb http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18846107 https://www.worldcat.org/search?q=bn%3A0198506732 GOC:mtg_apoptosis http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494263 ]
Synonyms: apoptotic cell death programmed cell death by apoptosis apoptotic programmed cell death
Term information
apoptosis signaling
apoptosis
type I programmed cell death
apoptotic program
activation of apoptosis
caspase-dependent programmed cell death
commitment to apoptosis
signaling (initiator) caspase activity
induction of apoptosis
induction of apoptosis by p53
apoptosis activator activity