Intracellular accumulations Flashcards

1
Q

List the 4 main pathways of abnormal intracellular accumulations

A
  1. Defects in packaging and transport mechanisms, lead to normal substances abnormally inadequate removal
  2. Genetic or acquired defects in folding, packaging, transport or secretion = Abnormal endogenous substances accumulation
  3. Enzyme deficiencies = failure to degrade a metabolite
  4. Missing enzymatic machinery to degrade or transport it out = deposition and accumulation of exogenous substances
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2
Q

Steatosis

A

Aka = Lipidosis
Accumulation of lipids within parenchymal cells

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3
Q

Steatosis Lx

A

Lx = Liver most common (as main lipid processing organ)
also seen in heart, muscle and kidney

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4
Q

Steatosis cause(4)

A

Causes
1. excessive fatty acids delivered from fat stores or diet
2. Abnormal hepatocellular metabolisms = decreased oxidation or use of fatty acids, impaired
3. synthesis of apoproteins or impaired lipoprotein synthesis
4. Impaired lipoprotein release from hepatocytes

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5
Q

Steatosis Gross appearance

A

swollen, yellow liver with greasy texture

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6
Q

Steatosis histological appearance

A

lipid vacuoles are sharply defined and unstained
Distend the cytoplasm
Displacing the nucleus to the periphery of the cell

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7
Q

Excessive intracellular deposits of glycogen - when does it occur

A

Occurs when
there are abnormalities of either glucose or glycogen metabolism
Eg - hyperadrenocorticism —> glucocorticoids increases hepatic glycogen storage. (Called- steroid -induced hepatopathy)

Eg- Glycogen storage disease ( rare genetic disorder of enzymes that reverse glycogen) = end result of mass accumulation of glycogen)

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8
Q

Excessive intracellular deposits of glycogen –> Histological viewing

A
  • vacuoles of glycogen are less sharply defined and more irregularly shaped than the vacuoles of lipidosis and may contain granular eosinophilic material.
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9
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein cause

A

Causes —> Intracellular accumulation of proteins to the point of morphologically visible accumulation have diverse causes

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10
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein –> histology appearance (4)

A

rounded
Eosinophilic droplets
Vacuoles
Aggregates in the cytoplasm

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11
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein –> 4 ways

A
  1. Reabsorption droplets in proximal renal tubules
  2. Plasma cells engaged in active synthesis of immunoglobulins
  3. Intracellular transport and secretion of critical proteins malfx
  4. Aggregation of abnormal proteins- either intracellular, extracellular or both.
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12
Q

Intracellular accumulations of proteins - reabsorption droplets in proximal renal tubules

A

Proteinuria
Normally pinocytosis in proximal tubule
Disorder- heavy protein leakage = increased reabsorption = pink hyline droplets
Reversible= proteinuria diminishes = droplets metabolise and disappear

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13
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein –> Plasma cells engaged in active synthesis of immunoglobulins

A

accumulation of normal secreted proteins

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14
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein –> Intracellular transport and secretion of critical proteins malfx

A

eg “alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, mutations in protein significantly slow folding = end result of aggregate in ER of liver

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15
Q

Intracellular accumulations of protein –> Aggregation of abnormal proteins

A

ither intracellular, extracellular or both. The aggregates may. Cause direct or indirect cause pathologic changes

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16
Q

Extracellular accumulations

A

Hyaline substances = intra or extracellular accumulation of proteinaceous material
eg amyloid

17
Q

Amyloidosis

A

extracellular deposits of proteinaceous substance
Hyaline appearance
Cause = inherited and inflammatory disorders
Deposits of fibrillar proteins cause tissue damage and functional compromise
The aggregation is usually of misfiled proteins

18
Q

Amyloidosis - Appearance histologically

A

eosinophilic, hyaline, extracellular

19
Q

Amyloidosis - Appearance macroscopically

A
  • appears yellow, waxy, coalescing nodular or amorphous deposits
  • with progressive accumulation it puts pressure on adjacent cells
20
Q

Amyloidosis - why is there the build up?

A

normal—> misfolded proteins are degraded by proteaseomes or macrophages. But malfx

21
Q

Two types of proteins that form amyloid

A

Normal proteins that have an inherent tendency to misfold —> form fibrils

Mutant proteins that are prone to misfiling and subsequent aggregation (very rare in vet med)

22
Q

Explain the contents of amyloid material

A

95% consists of fibril proteins
5% being the P component and other glycoproteins

23
Q

List the three types of amyloid

A

List the three types of amyloid
AL = amyloid light chain
AA = amyloid associated
AB = B- amyloid protein

24
Q

explain Amyloid light chain

A

all immunoglobulin light chains
Produced by free Ig light chains secreted by a monoclonal population of plasma cells
Deposition associated with certain plasma celll tumours.
When neoplastic proliferations of plasma cells are the source of amyloid = amyloidosis is called primary

25
Amyloid-associated
derived from unique non-Ig protein made by liver Derived by proteolysis of larger precursor in the serum called SAA (serum amyloid-associated) SAA- synthesised by liver and circulated bound to high-density lipids SAA production increases when in inflammatory states (part of acute response) Therefore, often called secondary amyloidosis as it associated with chronic inflammation Lx = mainly in kidney, liver and splenic white pulp
26
B- amyloid protein
constitutes the core of cerebral plaques of Alzheimer Derived by proteolysis from much larger transmembrane glycoprotein, called amyloid precursor protein
27
Other extracellular accumulations
Collagen (fibrosis) Fatty infiltration Cholesterol crystals
28
Collagen (fibrosis)
is an excess in fibrous collagen in the intersitium of organs or tissues commonly associated with inflammation and tissue injury
29
Fatty infiltration
increased no. or volume of adipocytes in the intersitium of organ or tissue secondary to obesity or atrophy
30
Cholesterol crystals
often form in haemorrhaged or necrotic tissues = a granulomatous inflammation