11 - Cellular Adaptations Flashcards
What genes regulate normal cell proliferation?
Protooncogenes
How can you increase growth of a tissue?
- Shorten cell cycle
- Convert quiescent cells to proliferating cells
What are the three checkpoints in the cell cycle?
- Restriction point at end of G1 (most critical and those that pass will go through full cycle but if activated p53 comes into play)
- G1/S transition: DNA damage before replication
- G2/M transition: DNA damage after replication
What is the relevance of the restriction checkpoint?
- Cells that pass this point normally complete the full cell cycle
- If checkpoint activation here p53 protein stops cell cycle and triggers DNA repair mechanisms or apoptosis if irreparable damage
What does the p53 protein do?
Tumour supression gene, regulates cell cycle
What is the likely outcome of faulty cell cycle checkpoints?
Cancer
How is the cell cycle controlled?
- Proteins called cyclins work with enzymes CDKs
- CDK activated by binding and complexing with cyclins
- Activated CDKs phosphorylate proteins e.g RB protein, that are needed for progression of the cell cycle
- Activated CDK complexes regulated by CDK inhibitors and growth factors stimulate production of cyclins and shut off CDK inhibitors
What is a retinoblastoma susceptibility (RB) protein?
- Tumour suppressor gene that is often defective in cancer, causing retinoblastoma
- Inactivated by phosphorylation by CDK4
What is a cell adaptation and what are the different adaptations?
State between an unstressed cell and an overstressed injured cell, usually reversible
- Hyperplasia
- Hypertrophy
- Atrophy
- Metaplasia
What is hyperplasia and where does it occur?
- Increase in tissue size due to increased cell numbers
- Occurs in labile or stable cell populations and is reversible
- Hormonal or compensatory
- Controlled and reversible but repeated division exposes cell to risk of mutations and neoplasia
What is the difference between hormonal and compensatory hyperplasia?
Physiological hyperplasia
- Hormonal: increase in functional capacity
- Compensatory: increase in tissue mass e.g after injury
Why does pathological hyperplasia usually occur?
- Secondary to excessive hormonal stimulation or growth factor production
- Normal response to abnormal condition
What are some examples of physiological and pathological hyperplasia?
- Physiological: Proliferative endothelium and increased bone marrow production of RBC at altitude
- Pathological: goitre in iodine deficiency, epidermal thickening in chronic eczema and psoriasis
What is hypertrophy and where does it occur?
- Mainly in permanent tissues as they have little replicatitive ability
- Response to increase in functional demand and/or hormone stimulation
- Cells synthesise more cytoplasm and may also undergo hyperplasia in response to endocrine stimulation
What are some examples of physiological and pathological hypertropy?
Physiological: skeletal muscle of bodybuilder, pregnant uterus under influence of oestrogen with hypertrophy and hyperplasia
Pathological: cardiac muscle hypertrophy due to valve disease/hypertension, smoot muscle hypertrophy of SI due to intestinal stenosis, bladder muscle hypertropy due to enlarged prostate
What happens when the stimulus for hypertrophy and hyperplasia is removed?
Cells and organs become normal size again