Apoptosis Flashcards

1
Q

characteristics in PM during apoptosis

A

PS gets evenly distributed on both sides of membrane via scramblase
-recognized/ingested by phagocytic cells before apoptotic bodies have chance to spill its dangerous contents

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2
Q

characteristics in cytoplasm during apoptosis

A
cell shrinks (by ~1/3, and can tear
---> cause cytoskeletal change
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3
Q

characteristics in nucleus during apoptosis

A

Nuclear collapse

  • DNA condense (crescent) around nuclear envelope
  • endonuclease cuts DNA in linkers between nucleosomes
    • –> extensive DNA damage via numerous simultaneous ds breaks
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4
Q

zeiosis

A

boiling action of PM after shrinkage resulting in self tearing into apoptotic bodies
(get taken up by macrophages before it spills its dangerous contents)

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5
Q

Why don’t macrophages recognize cells as apoptotic?

A

removal of apoptotic cells is physiological and silent

–> necessary for events that occur constantly throughout normal human body!

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6
Q

morphology of necrosis

A

high amplitude swelling

-can no longer maintain ionic gradient

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7
Q

common triggers of necrosis

A
  1. ischemia following occlusion of major artery
  2. physical/chemical trauma
  3. overwhelming infection
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8
Q

Importance in physiological/pathological process of necrosis

A
  1. Trigger —> mitochondria swells
  2. At “high amplitude swelling” stage, cell can no longer maintain ionic gradients/oxidative phosphorylation
  3. Cell runs out of energy
  4. Pumps fail and water floods in = cell lysis
  5. Lysis releases intracellular contents into extracellular space = intense inflammatory response
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9
Q

Tissues which there is most apoptosis occuring. Why?

A

thymus cells (lymphocytes):
very dangerous if damaged or mutated
- most sensitive cells to radiation (tiny dose causes lymphocyte to die)
- “better dead than wrong”

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10
Q

Tissues which there is least apoptosis occuring. Why?

A

fibroblasts: leisure to repair more severe damage (continuum of response to injury) - less risky

only if damage is too overwhelming = apoptosis

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11
Q

Role of caspases and mitochondrion in apoptosis

A

caspases are activated by series of intrinsic or extrinsic events which induce apoptosis

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12
Q

caspases 3

-what activates it?

A

an EXECUTIONER/EFFECTOR

activated by caspase 9 or 8

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13
Q

caspases 8

  • what activates it?
  • what does it activate?
  • what pathway is it a part of?
A

is activated by FADD, which activates caspase 3

in extrinsic pathway

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14
Q

caspases 9

  • what activates it?
  • what does it activate?
  • what pathway is it a part of?
A

Known as ACTIVATOR caspase

is activated by Apaf-1 and activates caspase 3

in intrinsic pathway

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15
Q

Bcl-2 and Bcl-Xl

A

anti-apoptotic factors

anti and pro apoptotic factors control signaling for mitochondrial apoptosis

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16
Q

Cytotoxic/killer T cells (CTL)

A

responsible for surveillance and instructing target cells to undergo apoptosis thru extrinsic pathway

17
Q

Intrinsic pathway vs Extrinsic pathway of cell death

A

Intrinsic: involves anti and pro apoptotic factors which regulates caspase 9 and 3.

Extrinsic: involves CTL and upregulated expression of Fas/CD97, which activates caspase 3

but downstream pathways are the same.

18
Q

Novel way of looking at malignancy

A

if proliferation exceeds cell death:

  • cells are dividing too fast
  • cells not dying fast enough
19
Q

Difference between phagocytosis of apoptotic and necrotic cells

A

apoptotic cells: recognized/ingested by phagocytic cells before apoptotic bodies have chance to spill its dangerous contents
(not imflammatory)

necrotic cells:
intense inflammatory event = attract macrophages

20
Q

autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS)

A

pathogenesis is failure of cells to die rather than uncontrolled proliferation

have mutation in Fas or FasL

21
Q

Kaposi’s sarcoma virus

A

Herpes virus HHV-8 have viral FLIPs that inhibits apoptosis signals

22
Q

FLippase

A

If PS accidentally gets flipped to outer leaflet of membrane, flippase immediately flips it back inside.

23
Q

Where do the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways take place?

A

intrinsic: mitochondrial
extrinsic: transmembrane