Apoptosis vs Lysis - What's the difference?
apoptosis | lysis |
(biology, cytology) A process of programmed cell death by which cells undergo an ordered sequence of events which lead to death of the cell, as occurs during growth and development of the organism, as a part of normal cell aging, or as a response to cellular injury.
* 1972 , John F Kerr et al., (title):
*1999 , (Matt Ridley), Genome , Harper Perennial 2004, p. 238:
*:Indeed, so important is apoptosis' that it is gradually becoming clear that almost all therapeutic cancer treatment works only because it induces ' apoptosis by alerting p53 and its colleagues.
* 2011 , Terence Allen and Graham Cowling, The Cell: A Very Short Introduction , Oxford 2011, p. 74:
(medicine, pathology) A gradual recovery from disease (opposed to crisis ).
* 1902 , William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience , Folio Society 2008, p. 157:
(biochemistry) The disintegration or destruction of cells
(biochemistry) The breakdown of molecules into constituent molecules
As nouns the difference between apoptosis and lysis
is that apoptosis is a process of programmed cell death by which cells undergo an ordered sequence of events which lead to death of the cell, as occurs during growth and development of the organism, as a part of normal cell aging, or as a response to cellular injury while lysis is a gradual recovery from disease (opposed to crisis).apoptosis
English
Noun
- Apoptosis : a basic biological phenomenon with wide-ranging implications in tissue kinetics.
- Apoptosis is routine in developmental processes such as the removal of webbing between fingers in humans, the loss of tadpole tails in amphibians, and insect metamorphosis.
Hypernyms
* programmed cell deathCoordinate terms
* autophagyDerived terms
* apoptotic * apoptotically English words suffixed with -osis ----lysis
English
Noun
(-)- The older medicine used to speak of two ways, lysis'' and ''crisis , one gradual, the other abrupt, in which one might recover from a bodily disease.
