3- MoD; Cell Damage Flashcards
what is necrosis?
death to a group of cells affected by an injurious agent/ event - often too little blood flowing to tissue, damaging cells which need to be removed
acute, deliberate inflammation to clear cell debris via phagocytosis
causes of necrosis
injury (to numerous cells within a tissue)
infection
infarction
inflammation
cancer = reduced blood supply to cells within a tumour mass
describe the process of necrosis
infectious event/ agent damages a group of cells - affects blood supply to the area
decreased blood supply = decreased oxygen = decreased ATP production
decreased activity of ATP dependent ion channels/ pumps - induces ionic imbalance
causes changes in cell osmolarity, and an increase in volume as water is drawn in = adds pressure on organelle membranes
pressure causes lysosomal membrane rupture and the release of lysosomal enzymes which degrade cell contents
cell continues to swell in this time - it gets so big the cell membrane ruptures and releases cell debris into the extracellular space
cell debris cleared by phagocytosis
differentiate and describe reversible and irreversible swelling
reversible swelling - before lysosomal cell rupture, all the events before are reversible
if the cell is suddenly reoxygenated - ATP production increases, increases activity of ATP dependent pumps which restores ionic balance and cell osmolarity
= decreases swelling
irreversible swelling - following lysosomal membrane rupture, events are irreversible as there’s too much damage and the cell is no longer capable of ATP production
describe the microscopic nuclear changes within a cell undergoing necrosis
chromatin condenses and shrinks, and is degraded by DNAses
nucleus fragments
describe the microscopic biochemical changes within a cell undergoing necrosis
intracellular enzymes and proteins are released into extracellular space - e.g. creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase
these are detectable in blood and urine - can be used to measure the extent of tissue damage and necrosis
describe the microscopic cytoplasmic changes within a cell undergoing necrosis
loss of cellular structures as materials are digested by enzymes
proteins denature and aggregate - cytoplasm turns white and opaque instead of transparent
what is apoptosis?
selective, programmed cell death in one or fewer cells - without an inflammatory response
causes of apoptosis
normal healthy physiological and pathological reaction
healthy:
- occurs in embryogenesis to form individual fingers
- endocrine-dependent tissue atrophy
- normal tissue turnover
pathological:
- lack of growth factor inducing neuronal death
- DNA damage-mediated apoptosis
- cell death in tumours in the middle of the mass, have the most limited blood supply
- immune response induced by CD8+ T cells, NK cells
compare apoptosis and necrosis
apoptosis = selective, programmed cell death in one or fewer cells
- all events are IRREVERSIBLE and ATP dependent
- cell SHRINKS as cytoskeleton is disassembled
- cell contents are ORDERLY packaged in membrane-bound vesicles which express new molecules and are phagocytosed without an inflammatory response
- no/ limited leakage of cytosolic components
necrosis = death to a group of cells affected by an injurious agent/ event
- events are reversible up to a point, all ATP dependent
- cell SWELLS from water influx following changes in cell osmolarity
- lysosomal rupture releases enzymes which degrade cell material HAPHAZARDLY
- lots of leakage of cytosolic components and cell debris released into extrac. space
- phagocytosis of cell debris is an acute inflammatory reaction
describe the microscopic cytoplasmic changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis
cell shrinkage from cytoskeleton disassembly and packaging organelles into membrane-bound vesicles
cell fragmentation as vesicles bud off - phagocytosed by macrophages
limited leakage compared to necrosis - less inflammation triggered
describe the microscopic nuclear changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis
nuclear chromatin condenses on nuclear membrane
DNA cleaved within nucleus
describe the microscopic biochemical changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis
expression of charged sugar molecules on the outer surface of cell membranes = recognised by macrophages to enhance phagocytosis and reduce inflammation
protein cleavage by proteases and caspases
describe the differences in DNA digestion between apoptosis and necrosis, as shown on a chromosomal DNA run on agarose gel
normally there’s a single high molecular weight band of unaffected DNA
apoptosis = smaller band produced as DNA is digested - orderly
necrosis = non-specific DNA digestion causes a DNA smear
what signals promote cell survival?
cell-cell or cell-matrix contacts
growth factors
cytokines