vacuolar cell
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Autophagy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 928-929 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena A Minina ◽  
Andrei P Smertenko ◽  
Peter V Bozhkov
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 203 (6) ◽  
pp. 917-927 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena A. Minina ◽  
Lada H. Filonova ◽  
Kazutake Fukada ◽  
Eugene I. Savenkov ◽  
Vladimir Gogvadze ◽  
...  

Although animals eliminate apoptotic cells using macrophages, plants use cell corpses throughout development and disassemble cells in a cell-autonomous manner by vacuolar cell death. During vacuolar cell death, lytic vacuoles gradually engulf and digest the cytoplasmic content. On the other hand, acute stress triggers an alternative cell death, necrosis, which is characterized by mitochondrial dysfunction, early rupture of the plasma membrane, and disordered cell disassembly. How both types of cell death are regulated remains obscure. In this paper, we show that vacuolar death in the embryo suspensor of Norway spruce requires autophagy. In turn, activation of autophagy lies downstream of metacaspase mcII-Pa, a key protease essential for suspensor cell death. Genetic suppression of the metacaspase–autophagy pathway induced a switch from vacuolar to necrotic death, resulting in failure of suspensor differentiation and embryonic arrest. Our results establish metacaspase-dependent autophagy as a bona fide mechanism that is responsible for cell disassembly during vacuolar cell death and for inhibition of necrosis.


2004 ◽  
Vol 279 (46) ◽  
pp. 48404-48409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Artemis Kosta ◽  
Céline Roisin-Bouffay ◽  
Marie-Françoise Luciani ◽  
Grant P. Otto ◽  
Richard H. Kessin ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 160 (7) ◽  
pp. 1105-1114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Pierre Levraud ◽  
Myriam Adam ◽  
Marie-Françoise Luciani ◽  
Chantal de Chastellier ◽  
Richard L. Blanton ◽  
...  

Cell death in the stalk of Dictyostelium discoideum, a prototypic vacuolar cell death, can be studied in vitro using cells differentiating as a monolayer. To identify early events, we examined potentially dying cells at a time when the classical signs of Dictyostelium cell death, such as heavy vacuolization and membrane lesions, were not yet apparent. We observed that most cells proceeded through a stereotyped series of differentiation stages, including the emergence of “paddle” cells showing high motility and strikingly marked subcellular compartmentalization with actin segregation. Paddle cell emergence and subsequent demise with paddle-to-round cell transition may be critical to the cell death process, as they were contemporary with irreversibility assessed through time-lapse videos and clonogenicity tests. Paddle cell demise was not related to formation of the cellulose shell because cells where the cellulose-synthase gene had been inactivated underwent death indistinguishable from that of parental cells. A major subcellular alteration at the paddle-to-round cell transition was the disappearance of F-actin. The Dictyostelium vacuolar cell death pathway thus does not require cellulose synthesis and includes early actin rearrangements (F-actin segregation, then depolymerization), contemporary with irreversibility, corresponding to the emergence and demise of highly polarized paddle cells.


Parasitology ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan Meredith ◽  
William R. Kaufman

The histology and ultrastructure of the salivary gland in Dermacentor andersoni are presented with particular emphasis on those aspects relating to fluid secretion. We suggest that the group III acinus contributes most of the fluid portion of the saliva (i.e. water and small molecules) and that the main cell-type involved is what we name the ‘water-cell’. The granule-cells possibly secrete the cement by which the tick secures its mouthparts to the host, and the ‘vacuolar cell’ possibly produces a protein-rich secretion. The function of the group I acinus remains obscure.


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