1.1 Red Blood Cells Flashcards
Red blood cells
- Red blood cells are ______________ 7.5 x 2 μm. This shape maximizes the surface area / volume ratio, allowing more effective gas exchange. The discs are also ____________, allowing passage through small blood vessels such as capillaries.
- RBC (erythrocytes) are the most common type of blood cell and the principal means of delivering O2 to tissues via the blood, transporting carbon dioxide from the tissues to the lung, and help regulate extracellular fluid pH.
- RBCs contain hemoglobin, a molecule that binds to oxygen. The red color of blood is due to the color of oxygen-rich hemoglobin.
- RBCs develop in the bone marrow and live for about ________________
- They are flexible biconcave discs and lack a _______________________ and they cannot synthesize proteins. RBCs use anerobic metabolism as an energy source.
- There are a total of ______________________ in the body containing 1 kg of hemoglobin.
- The precursors of mature RBCs are reticulocytes. They are formed in the bone marrow, enter the blood circulation, remain there for a day before differentiating into mature RBCs. These cells are _____________. Reticulocytes possess ribosomes for _____________, and mitochondria to allow ___________________________.
non-nucleated biconcave discs;
deformable;
120 days;
nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes,
3 x 1013 RBCs (30 trillion);
non-nucleated;
globin synthesis;
oxidative metabolism and heme synthesis
What is hematocrit?
Volume occupied by RBCs in 100ml of blood
What is mean corpuscular volume (MCV)?
average volume of single RBCs
What is mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH)?
average mass of hemoglobin in each RBC
What is mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC)?
Average concentration of hemoglobin in a single RBC
What is normal mcv?
83-99fL
what is normal MCH?
28-32 pg
what is normal MCHC?
32-36 g/dL
Hematopoiesis before and after birth
- 1-3 months fetal life (first trimester): Blood cells arise in the _______________________.
- 3-7 month fetal life (second trimester): Blood cells arise primarily in the _______, with the ____________ contributing.
- 7-9 month fetal life (third trimester): As bone cavities develop, stem cells migrate into the bone marrow, and hematopoiesis begins in the bone marrow.
- After birth: Hematopoiesis occurs primarily in the bone marrow, mainly in the _______________________. Hematopoiesis occurs initially in long bones (e.g. _______________), but as walking begins, these bones become weight bearing and solid, so hematopoiesis in these bones decreases.
mesoderm of the yolk sac;
foetal liver; foetal spleen
pelvis, vertebrae, sternum and ribs;
tibia and femur
Intramedullary versus Extramedullary hematopoiesis: In adults, hematopoiesis occurs primarily in the bone marrow (intramedullary hematopoiesis). In severe and chronic anemia, the body compensates by initiating additional hematopoiesis in the ___________________ (extramedullary hematopoiesis).
Bone marrow transplant: Bone marrow is removed from the _____________ of the donor under general anesthesia and then transfused into the blood circulation of the recipient. The cells home to the bone marrow of the recipient, colonize the bone marrow and begin hematopoiesis. The donor and recipient must be _________________ to ensure that graft-versus-host disease does not occur.
Stem cell transplant: Pluripotent stem cells are isolated from the bone marrow by first depleting mature and immature blood cells using _______________, and then enriching for CD34+ stem cells. CD34 is a glycoprotein found on the cell surface, which may contribute to the attachment of stem cells to the __________________. The stem cells are transfused into the blood circulation of the recipient. They colonize the bone marrow and initiate hematopoiesis.
liver and spleen ;
pelvis (Iliac crest);
HLA-matched;
lineage-specific monoclonal antibodies;
stroma/matrix in the bone marrow;
Pancytopenia
- Decreased RBCs (Erythropenia): ________________
- Decreased WBCs (Leukopenia): frequent infections, __________________
- Decreased Platelets (Thrombocytopenia): mucosal and gingival bleeding, purpura, ___________, __________
anemia;
mouth & pharyngeal ulceration;
petechia, ecchymoses
What is the pathway to be a RBC?
CD34 –> CFU-GEMM –> BFU-E –> CFU-E –> Proerythoblast –> Basophil erythoblast –> Polychromatophil erythoblast –> Orthochromatic erythoblast –> reticulocyte –> Erythrocyte (RBC)
Pathway to be a neutrophil?
CD34 –> CFU - GEMM –> CFU- GM –> CFU- G –> neutrophil
Pathway to be a monocyte?
CD34 –> CFU-GEMM –> CFU- GM –> CFU-G –> Neutrophil
Pathway to be to be a basophil?
CD34 –> CFU-GEMM –> CFU- Bas –> Basophil
Pathway to be an eosinophil?
CD34 –> CFU- GEMM –> CFU- Eos –> Eosinophil
Three types of pluripotent stem cells that both self-renew (replenish themselves) and ___________________.
Pluripotent stem cell
- _____________ (Colony forming unit – Granulocyte, Erythroid, Monocyte, Megakaryocyte) – give rise to RBCs, neutrophils, monocytes, platelets, basophils and neutrophils.
-____________(Colony forming unit - Lymphoid) – gives rise to lymphocytes.
differentiate into multiple blood lineages;
CFU-GEMM;
CFU-L
Committed stem cells: These cells do not self-renew and are committed to a particular blood lineage, examples are ??
BFU-E (Burst-forming Unit-Erythroid), CFU-E (Colony Forming Unit-Erythroid) CFU-GM (Colony Forming Unit – Granulocyte-Monocyte), CFU-Meg (Colony Forming Unit – Megakaryocyte), CFU-Bas (Colony forming unit – Basophil), CFU-Eos (Colony Forming Unit – Eosinophil), CFU-G (Colony Forming Unit – granulocyte), CFU-M (Colony Forming Unit – Monocyte) .
Growth factors: A complex hierarchy of growth factors drives hematopoiesis.
- Recombinant GM-CSF (Granulocyte-Monocyte Colony Stimulating Factor, Leukine) is approved for clinical use to accelerate hematopoiesis following autologous BM transplant. GM-CSF acts on many cells in the lineage pathway and induces the differentiation of ___________________________
- ______________ is clinically approved to drive RBC development.
- ___________________ is used to drive granulocyte differentiation. It acts on CFU-G and to some extent on BFU-E
CFU-GEMM, BFU-E, CFU-GM, CFU-Meg, CFU-Bas and CFU-Eos;
Recombinant EPO (erythropoietin;
Recombinant G-CSF (Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor, Filgrastim)
ome definitions
- _______________: decreased numbers of white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets.
- ________________: decreased white blood cells.
- __________________: decreased neutrophils.
- Monocytopenia: decreased monocytes.
- Eosinopenia: decreased eosinophils.
- _________________: decreased basophils.
- ________________: decreased lymphocytes.
- ________________: decreased platelets
Pancytopenia;
Leukopenia;
Neutropenia or granulocytopenia;
Basocytopenia (basopenia);
Lymphopenia;
Thrombocytopenia
Some causes of Pancytopenia
- Classical aplastic anemia: Failure of _________________ causes pancytopenia.
- Autoimmune: autoantibodies destroy ____________.
- Microbes (_________________) damage stem cells.
- Radiation & Chemotherapy destroy stem cells.
- Fanconi’s Anemia is a rare genetic disease due to mutations of at least 15 different genes. Patients have pancytopenia as well many other abnormalities.
pluripotent stem cells;
stem cells;
Hepatitis C, HIV, Epstein Barr virus, Parvovirus, Mycobacteria