Term Name: exocytosis
Synonyms: nonselective vesicle exocytosis, vesicle exocytosis
Definition: A process of secretion by a cell that results in the release of intracellular molecules (e.g. hormones, matrix proteins) contained within a membrane-bounded vesicle. Exocytosis can occur either by full fusion, when the vesicle collapses into the plasma membrane, or by a kiss-and-run mechanism that involves the formation of a transient contact, a pore, between a granule (for example of chromaffin cells) and the plasma membrane. The latter process most of the time leads to only partial secretion of the granule content. Exocytosis begins with steps that prepare vesicles for fusion with the membrane (tethering and docking) and ends when molecules are secreted from the cell.
Ontology: GO: Biological Process [GO:0006887]    QuickGO    AmiGO

Relationships
has parts: exocytic process vesicle docking involved in exocytosis vesicle tethering involved in exocytosis
is a type of: secretion by cell vesicle-mediated transport
has subtype: autophagosome-dependent secretion constitutive secretory pathway exocytic insertion of neurotransmitter receptor to postsynaptic membrane exosomal secretion regulated exocytosis
has_part: vesicle fusion to plasma membrane
inverse has_part: phagosome maturation vesicle-mediated transport to the plasma membrane
negatively regulated by: negative regulation of exocytosis
positively regulated by: positive regulation of exocytosis
regulated by: regulation of exocytosis