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- Ovarian_follicle_atresia abstract "Ovarian follicle atresia is the periodic process in which immature ovarian follicles degenerate and are subsequently re-absorbed during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Typically around 20 follicles mature each month and only a single follicle is ovulated. The rest undergo atresia. That single dominant follicle becomes a corpus luteum following ovulation.Atresia is a hormonally controlled apoptotic process that depends dominantly on granulosa cell apoptosis. To date, at least five cell-death ligand-receptor systems have been reported in granulosa cells to play a role in atresia regulation. They are: tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) and receptors Fas ligand and receptors TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL; also called APO-2) and receptors APO-3 ligand and receptors PFG-5 ligand and receptorsIn addition, two intracellular inhibitor proteins, cellular FLICE-like inhibitory protein short form (cFLIPS) and long form (cFLIPL), which were strongly expressed in granulosa cells, may act as anti-apoptotic factors. It has been proposed that enhanced levels of Nitrogen oxide in rats can prevent atresia of the ovarian follicle, and depressed levels have the opposite effect.".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageID "21940213".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageLength "5554".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageRevisionID "679952904".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink APO-3.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Apoptosis.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink CFLIPS.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Caspase_8.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Reproduction_in_mammals.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Corpus_luteum.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Folliculogenesis.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Granulosa_cell.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Hormone.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Nitrogen_oxide.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Ovarian_follicle.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Ovarian_reserve.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Ovary.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink PFG-5.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Protein.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink TNF_receptors.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Tumor_necrosis_factor_alpha.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLink Tumor_necrosis_factors.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ovarian follicle atresia".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLinkText "atresia".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLinkText "atretic".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageWikiLinkText "ovarian atresia".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expert-subject.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Merge.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia subject Category:Reproduction_in_mammals.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia hypernym Process.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia type Election.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia type Mammal.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia type Mammal.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia comment "Ovarian follicle atresia is the periodic process in which immature ovarian follicles degenerate and are subsequently re-absorbed during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Typically around 20 follicles mature each month and only a single follicle is ovulated. The rest undergo atresia. That single dominant follicle becomes a corpus luteum following ovulation.Atresia is a hormonally controlled apoptotic process that depends dominantly on granulosa cell apoptosis.".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia label "Ovarian follicle atresia".
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia sameAs Q7113248.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia sameAs m.05n_4bj.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia sameAs Q7113248.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia wasDerivedFrom Ovarian_follicle_atresia?oldid=679952904.
- Ovarian_follicle_atresia isPrimaryTopicOf Ovarian_follicle_atresia.