SPARQL | HTML5 RDFa and Microdata document
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/11536006
https://identifiers.org/wb/C09G12.8
https://identifiers.org/wb/Y41D4B.13
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/Complex/a242a
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/Complex/c3e5f
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/ComplexBinding/a242a
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/ComplexBinding/c3e5f
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/d68cd
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/de87a
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/f683a
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id222b8da4
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id40b53183
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id91d9321
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id994bfe7d
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id9ae94aef
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/id9e560a6c
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/ida0eb77fd
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/ida3e0d875
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/ida94f1b4b
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/idb84cee99
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379/WP/Interaction/idbb4e601a
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000426
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000787
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000794
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000795
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000796
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000797
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000798
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000799
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00003828
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00006937
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00011677
https://identifiers.org/wikipathways/WP2829_r135379
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#Pathway
http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Collection
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#cellTypeOntologyTag
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/CL_0000445
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#isAbout
http://rdf.wikipathways.org/Pathway/WP2829_r135379
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#ontologyTag
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#Curation:AnalysisCollection
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/PW_0001145
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/CL_0000445
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/PW_0000009
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#organism
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/NCBITaxon_6239
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#organismName
http://vocabularies.wikipathways.org/wp#pathwayOntologyTag
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/PW_0001145
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/PW_0000009
http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/img
https://www.wikipathways.org//wpi/wpi.php?action=downloadFile&type=png&pwTitle=Pathway:WP2829&oldid=135379
https://www.wikipathways.org//wpi/wpi.php?action=downloadFile&type=svg&pwTitle=Pathway:WP2829&oldid=135379
http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/page
http://www.wikipathways.org/instance/WP2829_r135379
http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/identifier
https://identifiers.org/wikipathways/WP2829
http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/source
http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/title
Programmed cell death and cell engulfment
http://purl.org/dc/terms/description
Programmed cell death (PCD), or apoptosis, is an integral component of C. elegans development. During development, 131 cells are fated to die by apoptosis. PCD is easily observed with Nomarski optics in the C. elegans embryo; the nucleus of the apoptotic cell becomes refractile, resembling a flat button, making C. elegans an easy model for following apoptotic cell death. PCD in C. elegans can be divided into three main phases (with participating genes): specification of which cells should live or die (ces-1, ces-2, in general); activation of the cell killing machinery (egl-1, ced-9, ced-4 and ced-3); and an execution phase where the dying cell is dismantled and removed through phagocytosis (ced-1,-2,-5,-6,-7,-10 and-12), which occurs in concert with apoptotic DNA degradation (cps-6, nuc-1). Molecular and biochemical studies in C. elegans revealed programmed cell death mechanisms conserved in humans. The regulatory pathway that controls cell death is composed of conserved cell death activators and inhibitors: EGL-1 and BH3-domain-only proteins, CED-9 and Bcl-2, CED-4 and Apaf-1, and CED-3 and caspases, in nematodes and mammals, respectively. Further the degradation of chromosomal DNA involves a mitochondrial proapoptotic endonuclease: endonuclease G (EndoG), and AIF in mammals and their orthologs CPS-6 and WAH-1 in worms.
http://purl.org/dc/terms/identifier
http://purl.org/dc/terms/references
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/11536006
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/18061982
http://purl.org/spar/cito/cites
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/11536006
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/18061982
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00001324
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00001325
https://identifiers.org/pubmed/18061982
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000415
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000417
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000418
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000419
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000420
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000421
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000423
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000468
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00000469
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00001170
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00001949
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00001950
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00004205
https://identifiers.org/ensembl/WBGene00006604
https://identifiers.org/wikipathways/WP2829