Nineteenth century research on cell death

This paper reviews research on cell death in the 19th C. The first report of cell death was by Vogt in 1842, which was remarkably soon after the establishment of the cell theory by Schleiden and Schwann between 1838 and 1842. Initial studies on cell death, including that of Vogt, focused on its occu...

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Бібліографічні деталі
Опубліковано в: :Experimental Oncology
Дата:2012
Автори: Clarke, P.G.H., Clarke, S.
Формат: Стаття
Мова:English
Опубліковано: Інститут експериментальної патології, онкології і радіобіології ім. Р.Є. Кавецького НАН України 2012
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Онлайн доступ:https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/138729
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Назва журналу:Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Цитувати:Nineteenth century research on cell death / P.G.H. Clarke, S. Clarke // Experimental Oncology. — 2012. — Т. 34, № 3. — С. 139-145. — Бібліогр.: 69 назв. — англ.

Репозитарії

Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
id nasplib_isofts_kiev_ua-123456789-138729
record_format dspace
spelling Clarke, P.G.H.
Clarke, S.
2018-06-19T12:17:21Z
2018-06-19T12:17:21Z
2012
Nineteenth century research on cell death / P.G.H. Clarke, S. Clarke // Experimental Oncology. — 2012. — Т. 34, № 3. — С. 139-145. — Бібліогр.: 69 назв. — англ.
1812-9269
https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/138729
This paper reviews research on cell death in the 19th C. The first report of cell death was by Vogt in 1842, which was remarkably soon after the establishment of the cell theory by Schleiden and Schwann between 1838 and 1842. Initial studies on cell death, including that of Vogt, focused on its occurrence in metamorphosis (Vogt, 1842; Prévost and Lebert, 1844; Weismann, 1863–1866) or in blatant pathology (Virchow, 1858), but as histological techniques improved it was found to be involved in more subtle roles in numerous situations including endochondral ossification (Stieda, 1872), ovarian follicle atresia (Flemming, 1885), cell turnover (Nissen, 1886), the wholesale loss of a population of sensory neurons in fish (Beard, 1889), and the naturally occurring histogenetic death of myocytes (Felix, 1889) and neurons (Collin, 1906). The current categorization of cell death into about three main morphological types has 19th century roots in that apoptosis was well described by Flemming (1885), who called it chromatolysis, and various authors including Noetzel (1895) proposed a threefold classification. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled “Apoptosis: Four Decades Later”.
en
Інститут експериментальної патології, онкології і радіобіології ім. Р.Є. Кавецького НАН України
Experimental Oncology
Reviews
Nineteenth century research on cell death
Article
published earlier
institution Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
collection DSpace DC
title Nineteenth century research on cell death
spellingShingle Nineteenth century research on cell death
Clarke, P.G.H.
Clarke, S.
Reviews
title_short Nineteenth century research on cell death
title_full Nineteenth century research on cell death
title_fullStr Nineteenth century research on cell death
title_full_unstemmed Nineteenth century research on cell death
title_sort nineteenth century research on cell death
author Clarke, P.G.H.
Clarke, S.
author_facet Clarke, P.G.H.
Clarke, S.
topic Reviews
topic_facet Reviews
publishDate 2012
language English
container_title Experimental Oncology
publisher Інститут експериментальної патології, онкології і радіобіології ім. Р.Є. Кавецького НАН України
format Article
description This paper reviews research on cell death in the 19th C. The first report of cell death was by Vogt in 1842, which was remarkably soon after the establishment of the cell theory by Schleiden and Schwann between 1838 and 1842. Initial studies on cell death, including that of Vogt, focused on its occurrence in metamorphosis (Vogt, 1842; Prévost and Lebert, 1844; Weismann, 1863–1866) or in blatant pathology (Virchow, 1858), but as histological techniques improved it was found to be involved in more subtle roles in numerous situations including endochondral ossification (Stieda, 1872), ovarian follicle atresia (Flemming, 1885), cell turnover (Nissen, 1886), the wholesale loss of a population of sensory neurons in fish (Beard, 1889), and the naturally occurring histogenetic death of myocytes (Felix, 1889) and neurons (Collin, 1906). The current categorization of cell death into about three main morphological types has 19th century roots in that apoptosis was well described by Flemming (1885), who called it chromatolysis, and various authors including Noetzel (1895) proposed a threefold classification. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled “Apoptosis: Four Decades Later”.
issn 1812-9269
url https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/138729
citation_txt Nineteenth century research on cell death / P.G.H. Clarke, S. Clarke // Experimental Oncology. — 2012. — Т. 34, № 3. — С. 139-145. — Бібліогр.: 69 назв. — англ.
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