Lecture 7 - Apoptosis Flashcards
First records: Chromatolysis…
Apoptosis history
In the 1960s it was observed that ischaemic liver tissue showed scattered hepatocytes in surviving parenchyma, with small masses of cytoplasm and specks of condensed nuclear chromatin
The name shrinkage necrosis was suggested (Kerr, 1971)
Early in the 70s Currie, Wyllie and Kerr detected shrinkage necrosis in a set of other experiments, and it became clear that this is a distinctive form of cell death phenomenon with homeostatic function on cell population size (Kerr et al., 1972)
It was decided to name it apoptosis, a morphological term from the Greek “falling off”, as autumn leaves fall off trees in an inherently seasonal manner
Phenomenon called programmed cell death received its name before apoptosis (Saunders, 1967, Lockshin, 1971)
it referred to situations in which cells are programmed to die at a fixed time (death on schedule – eg of clusters of cells in the embryo)
These doomed cells die on schedule even if they are transplanted elsewhere in the embryo
In most (but not all !) cases the morphology of this death on schedule turns out to be apoptosis
Apoptosis is a process with distinct features
In 1976 and 1981
electrophoretically the chromatin of irradiated tissues broke down into fragments that produced a typical, ladder-like pattern
Wyllie et al in 1984
linked the ladder pattern with the phenomenon of apoptosis and thereby added a specific biochemical marker to the distinctive morphological changes
Apoptosis is a form of cell death characterized by
morphological as well as biochemical criteria (and both must be carefully utilized)
Morphologically:
cell shrinks and becomes
denser (shrinkage necrosis), chromatin becomes pyknotic and packed into smooth masses against the nuclear membrane (margination of chromatin)
Apoptosis may be separated into phases of
initiation or induction, integration or determination and execution
Apoptosis is a process with distinct features
The process:
The nucleus may break up (karyorhexis)
cell emits processes (budding phenomenon) that often contain pyknotic nuclear fragments (in vitro vs in vivo!)
processes tend to break off and become apoptotic bodies, which may be phagocytized by macrophages
little or no swelling of mitochondria or other organelles, cell membrane remains intact (until very late)
DNA is broken down into segments (multiples of approximately 185 bp), due to specific cleavage between nucleosomes
The process is under genetic control and can be initiated by an internal clock (development), or by extracellular agents such as hormones, cytokines, killer cells and a variety of chemical, physical, and viral agents
Role of microenvironment driving genetic control mechanism
signal for apoptosis can either arise from
the extracellular or intracellular environment, giving rise to an intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic pathway
Extrinsic apoptosis
Apoptosis can be initiated by extracellular molecules that bind to ‘death’ receptors (for example, FAS), in turn activating the caspase 8– caspase 3 cascade
extrinsic pathway relies on
extracellular death ligands, which transmit the signal via caspases within the cytoplasm, which ultimately activate the same executioner caspases as employed by the intrinsic pathway