3- MoD; Cell Damage Flashcards

1
Q

what is necrosis?

A

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

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2
Q

causes of necrosis

A

injury (to numerous cells within a tissue)
infection
infarction
inflammation
cancer = reduced blood supply to cells within a tumour mass

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3
Q

describe the process of necrosis

A

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

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4
Q

differentiate and describe reversible and irreversible swelling

A

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

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5
Q

describe the microscopic nuclear changes within a cell undergoing necrosis

A

chromatin condenses and shrinks, and is degraded by DNAses

nucleus fragments

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6
Q

describe the microscopic biochemical changes within a cell undergoing necrosis

A

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

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7
Q

describe the microscopic cytoplasmic changes within a cell undergoing necrosis

A

loss of cellular structures as materials are digested by enzymes

proteins denature and aggregate - cytoplasm turns white and opaque instead of transparent

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8
Q

what is apoptosis?

A

selective, programmed cell death in one or fewer cells - without an inflammatory response

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9
Q

causes of apoptosis

A

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

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10
Q

compare apoptosis and necrosis

A

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

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11
Q

describe the microscopic cytoplasmic changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis

A

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

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12
Q

describe the microscopic nuclear changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis

A

nuclear chromatin condenses on nuclear membrane

DNA cleaved within nucleus

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13
Q

describe the microscopic biochemical changes within a cell undergoing apoptosis

A

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

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14
Q

describe the differences in DNA digestion between apoptosis and necrosis, as shown on a chromosomal DNA run on agarose gel

A

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

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15
Q

what signals promote cell survival?

A

cell-cell or cell-matrix contacts
growth factors
cytokines

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16
Q

what signals promote cell apoptosis?

A

disruption of cell-cell/ cell-matrix contacts = important in cancers as cell move throughout body for metastasis

lack of growth factors
DNA damaging agents
death domain ligands

17
Q

what are the two types of apoptosis? give examples for the types

A

relative to the cell - intrinsic and extrinsic

intrinsic - e.g. DNA damage, interrupted cell cycle or protein synthesis, viral infection

extrinsic - e.g. withdrawing survival factors like mitogens, TNF extracellular signal, T or NK cells

18
Q

what are caspases?

A

cysteine aspartate-specific proteases - aspartate is the specific immuno-acid motif it binds to

act as a point of convergence for intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic mechanisms

19
Q

describe the caspase cascade, and how it relates to apoptosis

A

caspase cascade is a pyramidal caspase - involves signal amplification, starts with one initiator caspase, activates many molecules further downstream

starts with an initiator caspase - convergence point for intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic mechanisms

many initiator caspases within a cell at high concs - brought together in close proximity and cleave themselves

initiator caspase X cleaves procaspase Y at two sites - first the N terminal, then the C terminal, before rearranging small and large subunit of procaspase Y into an active configuration

initiator caspase activates downstream caspases - activate further effector downstream caspases

effector caspases have additional substrates - activate more caspases and other proteins = e.g. lamin for nuclear envelope, signalling, DNA replication or repair proteins

activated caspases and proteins contribute to cellular changes in apoptosis - e.g. chromatin condensing and shrinking, nucleus fragmenting, plasma membrane blebbing

20
Q

what are the initiator caspases in humans?

A

caspase 8 and 9

21
Q

what are the effector/ downstream caspases in humans?

A

1, 3, 6, 7

22
Q

describe the proteolytic mechanism for procaspases to activate

A

initiator caspases initiate autoproteolysis OR an initiator caspase will cleave a downstream caspase at 2 sites:
- first the N terminal, then the C terminal

then procaspase will rearrange small and large subunit into an active configuration

23
Q

what is the main overall trigger for intrinsic apoptosis?

A

intrinsic apoptosis is induced by cytochrome C release from the mitochondria

cytochrome C release occurs from anything that changes mitochondrial membrane permeability making it more permeable - e.g. oxidative stress, lack of growth factors

24
Q

components for cytochrome C-induced apoptosis?

A

cytochrome C - release from mitochondria

APAF-1/ apoptotic protease activating factor protein = has a cytochrome C binding site, APAF domain and CARD domain

procaspase-9 = has CARD and protease domains

procaspase 9 and APAF-1 share a CARD domain

25
Q

describe the mechanism for cytochrome C-induced apoptosis

A

cytochrome C is released from mitochondria under oxidative stress - binds to cytochrome C binding site on APAF-1

induces conformational change = favours dimerization of APAF-1 proteins

creates a microenvironment with a high conc. of CARD domains - recruits procaspase-9 to complex due to shared CARD domains

other proteins are also recruited to complex - creates a big multimeric protein complex called an apoptosome

protease domains of recruited procaspase-9 in close proximity induce autoproteolysis/ self-cleavage and activation into active caspase 9

caspase 9 goes from membrane to cytoplasm - triggers caspase cascade by cleaving downstream caspases

26
Q

what molecule regulates cytochrome C release?

A

BCL-2 family proteins = regulate permeability of mitochondrial outer membrane pores

27
Q

describe the regulation of cytochrome C release

A

BCL-2 family proteins regulate the permeability of mitochondrial outer membrane pores through a balance of pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic BCL-2 proteins

anti-apoptotic proteins - e.g. BCL-2, BCL-XL
pro-apoptotic proteins - e.g. Bax, Bad, Bid

not all BCL-2 proteins are involved in mitochondrial membrane permeability BUT they do all share a BH3 domain - makes dimerization/ multimerization easier

28
Q

list pro-apoptotic BCL-2 family proteins

A

Bad
Bid
Bax

29
Q

list anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family proteins

A

BCL-2
BCL-XL

30
Q

describe how the balance of apoptotic BCL-2 factors governs cytochrome C release and cell death - interactions between Bax, BCL-2 and Bad

A
  1. Bax binds to mitochondrial pore as a pro-apoptotic protein = allows cytochrome C release = allows apoptosis
  2. BCL-2 binds to Bax as a anti-apoptotic protein = closes pore = prevents cytochrome C release = prevents apoptosis
  3. Bad binds to BCL-2 more strongly than BCL-2 binds to Bax =displaces BCL-2 from pore as a pro-apoptotic signal = allows cytochrome C release and apoptosis
31
Q

what regulates BCL-2 proteins?

A

depends on:
1. gene expression
2. type of post-translational modifications
3. if the cell is in an environment with many growth factors/ survival signals

e.g. expression of TP53 following DNA damage, or phosphorylation as a post-translational modification

32
Q

how does TP53 regulate BCL-2 family proteins and apoptosis?

A

DNA damage occurs - activates expression of TP53 gene = TP53 TF = increase expression of pro-apoptotic Bax

Bax inserts itself into membrane, creates new pores, increases mitochondrial membrane permeability

not enough anti-apoptotic BCL-2 to block its effects = causes cytochrome C release

33
Q

how does phosphorylation as a post-transcriptional modification regulate BCL-2 family proteins and apoptosis?

A

if cell is in a growth factor rich environment - act as survival signals

growth factors activate AKT/PKB (protein kinase B)

PKB phosphorylates Bad - prevents it from binding and displacing BCL-2 = prevents pores opening

prevents cytochrome C release and apoptosis

(removing growth factors as survival signals would prevent this phosphorylation)

34
Q

what are the components of extrinsic apoptosis?

A

transmembrane receptor - has a ligand binding domain and death domain

death adaptor protein - has a death domain and death effector domain

procaspase-8 - has a death effector domain and protease domain

35
Q

describe the mechanism for extrinsic apoptosis with TNF as the ligand

A

TNF binds TNF- transmembrane receptor at the ligand binding domain = induces a conformational change for the recruitment of more TNF receptors

creates an environment with a high concentration of death domains - promoters dimerization/ multimerization and the recruitment of FAAD (death adaptor protein)

recruiting FADD proteins creates a high conc. environment of death effector proteins = promotes recruiting procaspase-8 due to shared death effector domain

creates a multimeric DISC protein complex - high conc of death effector domains promotes autoproteolysis of procaspase 8 into active caspase 8

active caspase 8 goes from membrane to cytoplasm - activates downstream caspases and other substrates = triggers apoptotic cellular changes