Cell Death Flashcards
What are the differences between necrosis and apoptosis?
Necrosis produces an inflammatory response as cells burst and toxins leak out where as Apoptosis is carried out in a controlled manner without inflammation.
What are some key pathways that lead to apoptosis?
Embryology - lumen of tubes (via apoptosis)
Response to growth signal- menstrual cycle (via apoptosis)
Inflammation - resolution, death of neutrophils (via apoptosis)
Immune defence - T and Natural Killer cell responses. (via apoptosis)
Tumour prevention - prevent mutation (via apoptosis)
Autoimmune disease - self destruct (via apoptosis)
HIV AIDS - HIV and activated T cell death (via apoptosis)
What is the role of the Bcl2 family ?
They are involved in check and balances
BCL2 travels in pairs (homodimerise - 2 molecules travelling together that are the same) - The 2 BCL2 prevent cell death
Another member of the family is BAX also travel in a homodimerise fashion but they promote cell death. (they do this by triggering the intrinsic apoptotic pathway).
Cell dies or lives depending on the balance of this family.
How did caspases get their name ?
Caspases are key mediators
They get their name from;
• cysteine in the active site : “C”
• cleavage after aspartate: “asp”
• protease: “ase”
Define anoikis ?
An epithelial cell dies after losing contact with basement
membrane/extra cellular matrix
Can cause a tumour to spread as if it gains the ability to not require a basement membrane then it can travel and form a tumour.
Define pyroptosis ?
Pyroptosis is where skin cells die by losing their nucleus and retaining their keratin.
Its a little like some apoptosis and some necrosis caused by the microbial trigger Salmonella
Pyrop - means fever
What can caspases target?
- cleave ICAD -> destroy genetic information
- cleave PARP -> prevent DNA repair
- cleave lamin -> break down nuclear architecture
- cleave keratin -> break down cytoplasmic architecture
Why are apoptotic cells phagocytosed?
Keep
What is reversible cell injury ?
Reversible cell injury is a cell losing its ability to homeostasis but it has not died yet
What conditions to doctors work to save reversible cell injury and why is this important ?
In patients who have had stroke and heart attacks you have killed some cells but you have some cells around that which are sub-lethally injured and you can save them and reverse some symptoms
What toxin is produced from the electron transport chain ?
Oxygen becomes reactive due to electrons producing free radicals (O2-). These free radicals then become Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) which is damaging to cells.
What can free radicals cause?
Sublethal/leathal injuries to cells.
What happens in cells that have underwent lethal injury ?
Cells that experience lethal injury break normal homeostasis and necrosis occurs.
Seen in stroke and heart attacks as cells cannot produce energy and die.
How can a thrombus cause lethal injury ?
A thrombus prevents oxygenated blood from reaching Glycolysis in a cell and this causes Anaerobic glycolysis.
In anaerobic glycolysis a little ATP is made but so is Lactate which goes through a series of processes and activates phospholipases, which causes cell membrane damage, leading to cell necrosis.
What is Necrosis?
Necrosis is a complete loss of energy balance in a cell.
It is the death of tissues following bioenergetic failure and loss of plasma membrane integrity
It induces inflammation and repair due to toxins being outside the cell which aren’t wanted
Caused by ischaemia, metabolic, trauma