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      Ascorbic Acid Induces Necrosis in Human Laryngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma via ROS, PKC, and Calcium Signaling : ASCORBIC ACID INDUCES NECROSIS IN HEP2 CELLS

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          Necroptosis: a specialized pathway of programmed necrosis.

          Necrosis is often viewed as an accidental and unregulated cellular event. However, accumulating evidence suggests that necrosis, like apoptosis, can be executed by regulated mechanisms. Hitomi et al. (2008) now describe an extensive network of genes that mediate a form of programmed necrosis called necroptosis.
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            Necrosis, a well-orchestrated form of cell demise: signalling cascades, important mediators and concomitant immune response.

            Necrosis has long been described as a consequence of physico-chemical stress and thus accidental and uncontrolled. Recently, it is becoming clear that necrotic cell death is as well controlled and programmed as caspase-dependent apoptosis, and that it may be an important cell death mode that is both pathologically and physiologically relevant. Necrotic cell death is not the result of one well-described signalling cascade but is the consequence of extensive crosstalk between several biochemical and molecular events at different cellular levels. Recent data indicate that serine/threonine kinase RIP1, which contains a death domain, may act as a central initiator. Calcium and reactive oxygen species (ROS) are main players during the propagation and execution phases of necrotic cell death, directly or indirectly provoking damage to proteins, lipids and DNA, which culminates in disruption of organelle and cell integrity. Necrotically dying cells initiate pro-inflammatory signalling cascades by actively releasing inflammatory cytokines and by spilling their contents when they lyse. Unravelling the signalling cascades contributing to necrotic cell death will permit us to develop tools to specifically interfere with necrosis at certain levels of signalling. Necrosis occurs in both physiological and pathophysiological processes, and is capable of killing tumour cells that have developed strategies to evade apoptosis. Thus detailed knowledge of necrosis may be exploited in therapeutic strategies.
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              Many stimuli pull the necrotic trigger, an overview

              The lab of Jürg Tschopp was the first to report on the crucial role of receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1) in caspase-independent cell death. Because of this pioneer finding, regulated necrosis and in particular RIPK1/RIPK3 kinase-mediated necrosis, referred to as necroptosis, has become an intensively studied form of regulated cell death. Although necrosis was identified initially as a backup cell death program when apoptosis is blocked, it is now recognized as a cellular defense mechanism against viral infections and as being critically involved in ischemia-reperfusion damage. The observation that RIPK3 ablation rescues embryonic lethality in mice deficient in caspase-8 or Fas-associated-protein-via-a-death-domain demonstrates the crucial role of this apoptotic platform in the negative control of necroptosis during development. Here, we review and discuss commonalities and differences of the increasing list of inducers of regulated necrosis ranging from cytokines, pathogen-associated molecular patterns, to several forms of physicochemical cellular stress. Since the discovery of the crucial role of RIPK1 and RIPK3 in necroptosis, these kinases have become potential therapeutic targets. The availability of new pharmacological inhibitors and transgenic models will allow us to further document the important role of this form of cell death in degenerative, inflammatory and infectious diseases.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Cellular Physiology
                J. Cell. Physiol.
                Wiley
                00219541
                February 2017
                February 2017
                August 16 2016
                : 232
                : 2
                : 417-425
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Oral Physiology, Dental Science Research Institute, Medical Research Center for Biomineralization Disorders; Chonnam National University School of Dentistry; Gwangju Republic of Korea
                [2 ]Department of Oral Anatomy, Dental Science Research Institute, Medical Research Center for Biomineralization Disorders; Chonnam National University School of Dentistry; Gwangju Republic of Korea
                Article
                10.1002/jcp.25438
                7eea59ef-26fd-4c2d-8ee4-695dd4cccfd7
                © 2016

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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