cell death and injury part 2 Flashcards
What is apoptosis
Programmed cell death
Cell death with shrinkage
Regulated intracellular program where a cell activates enzymes that degrade its own nuclear DNA and proteins
- DNA breakdown is non random and there us internucleosomal cleavge of DNA.
stages of apoptosis
initiation- involves caspase 9
execution- involves caspase 3 & 6
degradation and phagocytosis
*extrinsic and intrinsic pathway activate caspase enzymes
explain the intrinsic pathway in apoptosis
- initiating signal comes from within the cell.
- triggered by irreparable DNA damage, withdrawal of GF/hormones
- p53 protein is activated and causes the outer mitochondrial membrane to become leaky. Cytochrome C is released from the mitochondria and this causes activation of caspases.
explain the extrinsic pathway of apoptosis
initiated by extracellular signals
triggered by cells that are a danger e.g tumour cells, virus infected cells
TNFα is one of these signals secreted by T killer cells. It binds to cell membrane receptors and causes activation of caspases
define gangrene
necrosis visible to the naked eye
define infarction
necrosis caused by a reduction in arterial blood flow
define infarct
an area of necrotic tissue which is the result of loss of arterial blood supply.
types of infarct
coagulative -dry
liquefactive -wet
white infarct-solid organs. occlusion of end artery. wedge shaped
red infarct -haemorrhagic. loose tissue
what do the complications of infarction depend on
if there is an alternative blood supply
speed of ischaemia
tissue involved
oxygen content of the blood
what is ischaemia-reperfusion injury and causes?
if blood flow is returned to a damaged but not yet necrotic tissue damage sustained can be worse than if blood flow hadn’t returned.
causes - increased production of oxygen free radicals from reoxygenation. increased number of neutrophils resulting in more inflammation and increase tissue injury . delivery of complement proteins and activation of the complement pathway.
mechanisms of abnormal intracellular accumulations
abnormal metabolism
alterations in protein folding and transport
deficiency of critical enzymes
inability to degrade phagocytksed partciles
affects of build up of fluid/water in cells
severe cellular distress e.g hypoxia
sodium and water enter the cell and form discrete droplets
hydropic swellings(entire cell swollen) leads to entire organ swollen
what is steatosis
accumulation of triacylglycerides
caused by chronic alcohol misuse, obesity , diabetes mellitus
complications of steatosis
liver and metabolic dysfunction
liver failure
liver cirrhosis
sudden death
accumulation of proteins
intracellular accumulation leads to eosinophilic pink droplets or aggregations in the cytoplasm of cells