Lecture 2: Cellular Adaptations Flashcards
what two changes trigger cells to adapt?
- Changes due to normal physiological processes and
2. Changes in the environment
Explain why cells are described as ‘adaptable units’
Because they have the physiological ability to constantly adapt to changes in it’s environment both internally and external of the body
What is the general term for the mechanism that allows cells to adapt back to ‘normal’ when there is a change in its environment?
Homeostatic mechanisms
List the two types of physiological adaptations cells can go through
- Physiological METABOLIC adaptations
2. Physiological STRUCTURAL adaptations
Describe what a physiological metabolic adaptation of the cell is and give an example.
Physiological metabolic adaptations are subtle changes of metabolic function that are finely regulated at biochemical level.
EXAMPLE: If the body goes through a period of fasting, the cellular change that occurs is fatty acids are mobilised from adipose tissue to supply energy.
List the THREE types of physiological structural adaptations the cell can go through
- Increase in cellular activity
- Decrease in cellular activity
- Change in cell morphology
What increase/decrease triggers the cell to go through structural adaptations and why?
- There is an increase or decrease of functional demand on tissues
- There is an increase or decrease of hormonal stimulation of tissue
Why? So that the cell can withstand changes in its environment better
Define the term pathological stimuli
Pathological stimuli are those that trigger severe changes in cellular environment and are often the result of disease
EXAMPLE UV Rays
- pathological response = blistering and loss of epidermis
- -physiological response = tanning, melanin production induced
List THREE types of pathological stimuli and their examples:
- Genetic: gene defects chromosomal defects
- Physical agents: mechanical trauma, thermal damage, irradiation
- Chemical agents: heavy metal toxicity, solvents, drugs
How does the cell respond to injury caused by exposure to pathological stimuli (metabolic changes)?
It goes through a series of metabolic changes:
it decreases expression of unnecessary housekeeping genes and increases expression of cell stress genes.
What are housekeeping genes?
They are genes that code for normal structural proteins
What are cell stress genes?
They are genes that code for cell-stress proteins which are a set of proteins with cell-organising and protective functions
Why are cell stress proteins produced?
They are a rapid response system to pathological stimuli exposure, that are produced to minimise cell damage and ensure cell viability.
What is another name for cell stress proteins and why the name?
Heat-shock proteins HSPs
They were initially described in response to a heat shock experiment
Name two heat shock/cell stress proteins
- Small heat shock proteins
2. Ubiquitin
What is the role of small heat shock proteins and ubiquitin in cell stress response?
sHSP: role is to act as a molecular chaperone, and to protect normal or damaged proteins from further damage
Ubiquitin: role is to remove old or damaged proteins; acts as a co-factor for proteolysis
What other protein is formed in response to pathological stimuli
Inclusion bodies (it is a protein aggregate made up of abnormal cell constituents and ubiquitin)
Describe inclusion bodies
They are visible, permanent masses that appear within the cytoplasm of certain cells that undergo chronic stress.