Mitochondira Flashcards
What is reperfusion injury
Worsening of ischaemic tissue injury when adequate blood flow is restored due to innate and adaptive immune response + apoptosis of cells initiated by mitochondria
What happens to levels of cytochrome C in ischaemia and reperfusion
They rise (thought it could be used as a marker for post arrest reperfusion injury)
What are the 4 ways cells die
Necrosis, apoptosis, autophagy, programmed necrosis
What happens in necrosis
Membrane integrity is lost and ion transporters become dysfunctional.
Cell swelling and rupture
Release of toxic cellular components
Inflammatory response and death
What stimulates cell death in RI
General proinflammatory environment
Oxidative stress
Cytotoxic stimuli
Name some pro apoptotic proteins
Cytochrome C
Caspases
What is autophagy
Removal of damaged organelles and oxidised proteins etc
What happens in programmed necrosis
Necroptosis: protein kinases are activated to increase oxidative stress
Parthantosis: degradation of DNA within nucleus
What affect does hyperoxia have on mitochondria
Further injury and damage
In relation to RI and mitochondria, what does cooling patients do
Preserves mitochondria, stops MPTP opening, reduced apoptosis
Why is the brain particularly prone to reperfusion injury
High metabolic rate
Poor ability to store ATP
Cerebral glycogen stores deplete within 5 minutes of arrest
Cerebral mitochondria have less cytochrome C oxidase (an antioxidant) so there’s increased spillover of superoxide species and more susceptibility to ROS
What are the cardiac results of RI
Fibrosis
Arrhythmias due to a systolic Ca overload and resulting afterdepolarisations
What happens to oxygen and pH on reperfusion
There is an influx of oxygen
pH normalises
What is the pH paradox of RI
During ischaemia: acidosis with cell compensation mechanisms leading to raised intracellular Na
On reperfusion: H+ washout extracellularly leads to further Na influx to the cell. This high intracellular Na leads to a Ca influx and overload
Ca overload is one factor contributing to mPTP opening
What factors lead to MPTP opening
ROS generation
Ca influx
Both of these directly influence mPTP opening + they lead to activation of inflammatory and thrombogenic cascades which also open mPTP