Title: Cellular Adaptations to disease / cell & Death II
1Cellular Adaptations to disease / cell Death II
2- Reaction of Cells to injury
- - Reversible injury ( Degeneration)
- - Cell functions impaired but cell can
recover - - Irreversible injury
- - Cessation of all cell functions with
cellular death - - Necrosis
- - Sum of the degradative
inflammatory - reactions occuring after tissue
death. - - Apoptosis
- - programmed cell death
3- Causes of cell injury ( injurious stimuli)
- 1- Hypoxia
- - lack of oxygen to tissues ( i.e. infarct)
- 2- Genetic
- - Enzyme deficiency
- - Abnormality ( e.g. diabetes mellitus)
- 3- Nutritional
- - Effects on cells growth
- 4- Physical
- - Trauma - Cold - Heat
- Electrical - 5- Chemical
- - Therapeutic ( e.g. aspirin)
- - Non-therapeutic ( e.g ethanol abuse)
- 6- Biological
- - Infectious agents Bacteria
viruses , fungi - 7- Immunological - Hyposensitivity or
Hypersensitivity - 8- Aging - Life span of cells -
Environment
4- Targets of injurious stimuli
- 1- Aerobic respiration
- - Loss of ATP
- - Sodium pump failure water enters
cell . Cell swells - 2- Membranes
- - Defect in permeability . Water enters
cells cell - swells even death
- 3- Synthetic mechanisms
- - Enzymatic structural proteins are
not synthesized - .. Cell swells
- 4-Genetic apparatus
- - DNA RNA changes
- - Inherited or acquired
- - If enzymes deficient . Substrate
accumulates - cell swells
5- Changes of injury
- 1 - Congestion
- - increase of blood flow within vessels
- - Vessels are dilated packed with
RBCs - 2 - Edema
- - Increase in interstitial fluid with
widened space between - interstitial components
- - Causes swelling except in bone
- 3 - Hemorrhage
- - Accumulation of blood outside of
vessels - - Extravasation of RBCs into the
tissues or external surfaces. - 4 - Thrombosis
- - Clot within a blood vessel formed
during life - 5 - Embolus
- - Detached intravascular solid ,
liquid or gaseous mass that is carried in - the blood to a site distant from it
is point of origin. - Ex. Fat , bubble of air or N2 ,
atherosclerosis plaque , tumour , bone - marrow , foreign bodies
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11- Changes of injury
- - Cellular infiltration - influx of
cells usually from inflammation -
- Neutrophils , macrophages , lymphocytes , -
plasma cells , fibroblasts , angioblast. - - Fibrosis - Presence of
collagenous tissue - - Fibroblasts
, fibrocytes , collagen ground substance. - - Substance accumulation
- - Deposition of substances in cells or
interstitium - - Ex. lipid accumulation within cells
as in Gaucher,s disease
- - Ex. Amyloid
- Fibrillary protein produced
abnormally due to longstanding - inflammation or immune
dysfunction. - Accumulates in the interstitium
between cells ultimately kills - the cells causing major
damage to organ
12Fibrosis Keloid
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19- Hypoxic Cell Injury
- Results from cellular anoxia or hypoxia due to
- 1- Ischemic
- Obstruction of arterial blood flow ,
most - common cause
- 2- Anemia
- Reduction in number of oxygen
carrying - red blood cells.
- 3- Carbon monoxide poisoning
- Diminution in the oxygen carrying
capacity RBCs by - chemical alteration of hemoglobin.
- 4- Decreased perfusion of tissues by oxygen
carrying blood - Cardiac failure hypertension
shock - 5- Poor oxygenation of blood secondary to
pulmonary disease. -
20- Hypoxic Cell Injury
- Early stage
- - Affect mitochondria
Decreased oxidative phosphorylation ATP - synthesis
- - Decreased ATP availability
consequences - Failure of the cell
membrane pump - 1 - Increased
intercellular Na H2o decreased intracellular
K -
cellular swelling swelling of organelles - 2 - Cellular
swelling ( hydropic change) has large vacuoles in
the - cytoplasm
- 3 - Swelling of the
ER ( early reversible EM change) - 4 - Swelling of the
mitochondria - -
Progresses from reversible to irreversible with
marked -
dilatation of the inner mitochondrial space.
21- Hypoxic Cell Injury
- - Early Stage
- Disaggregation of ribosomes failure of
protein - synthesis
- - Ribosomal disaggregation is
also promoted by - membrane damage
- Stimulation of phospholipids activity
- - Results in increased glycolysis
- - Accumulation of lactate
- - Decreased intracellular PH
- - Acidification causes reversible
clumping of nuclear - chromatin
22- Hypoxic Cell Injury
- - Late stage
- - membrane damage to plasma to lysosomal
other - organelle membranes , with loss of membrane
- phospholipides
- - Reversible ( or irreversible ) morphologic
signs of damage - including formation of
- Myelin figures - Whorl like
structures probably -
originating from damaged membrane - Cell blebs - Cell surface deformity
most likely - caused by
disorderly function of - the cellular
cytoskeleton
23- Cell death caused by severe or prolonged
injury - - Point of no return is marked by
irreversible damage to - cell membranes .. Massive calcium
influx , extensive - calcifications of the mitochondria ,
cell death. - - Intracellular enzymes various other
proteins are - released from necrotic cells into the
circulation as a - consequence of the loss of integrity
of cell membranes . - The basis of a number of useful
laboratory - determinations as indicators
of necrosis ..
24- Myocardial enzymes in serum
- - Enzymes useful in the diagnosis of
myocardial infarction - - Aspartate aminotransferase ( AST aka
SGOT) - - Lactate dehydrogenase ( LDH)
- - Creatinine kinase ( CK aka CPK)
- - Troponins
- - Myoglobin
- Liver enzymes in serum
- - Transaminases
- - AST
- - Alanine aminotransferase ( ALT)
- - Alklaline phosphatase
- - Gamma glutamyltransferase (
GGT)
25- Vulnerability of cells to hypoxic injury varies
with the tissue or cell type - - Irreversibilty occurs after
- - 3-5 minutes for neurons
- - 1-2 hours for myocardial cells
- hepatocytes
- - Many hours for skeletal muscle
cells
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28- Free Radical injury
- Free radicales ( reactive oxygen metabolites)
- - Molecules with a single unpaired electron
in the outer orbital - - Exemplified by activated products of oxygen
reduction which includes - - superoxide ( O2-)
- - Hydroxyl radicales ( OH- , H2O2 )
29- Generation of free radicals
- - Normal metabolism
- - Oxygen toxicity
- - Ex. alveolar damage in adult
respiratory distress - syndrome
- - Ionizing radiation
- - Ultraviolet light
- - Drugs chemicals
- - Many promot proliferation of SER
induction the p-450 - system of mixed function of
oxidases of the SER - - Ex. proliferation
hypertrophy of the SER of the - hepatocytes in barbiturate
intoxication - - Reperfusion after ischemic injury
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32The role of reactive oxygen species in cell
injury. O2 is converted to superoxide (O2-) by
oxidative enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum
(ER), mitochondria, plasma membrane, peroxisomes,
and cytosol. O2- is converted to H2O2 by
dismutation and thence to OH by the
Cu2/Fe2-catalyzed Fenton reaction. H2O2 is also
derived directly from oxidases in peroxisomes.
Not shown is another potentially injurious
radical, singlet oxygen. Resultant free radical
damage to lipid (peroxidation), proteins, and DNA
leads to various forms of cell injury. Note that
superoxide catalyzes the reduction of Fe3 to
Fe2, thus enhancing OH generation by the Fenton
reaction. The major antioxidant enzymes are
superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase, and
glutathione peroxidase. GSH, reduced glutathione
GSSG, oxidized glutathione NADPH, reduced form
of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate.
33- Chemical cell injury
- - Model liver cell membrane damage induced by
- carbon tetrachloride ( CCl4)
- - CCL4 processed by P-450 system of mixed
function oxidases within SER .. CCl3 (
highly reactive free radical) .
Diffuses throughout the cell .. Lipid
peroxidation of intracellular membrane. - -Disaggregation of ribosomes .. Decreased
protein synthesis - - Plasma membrane damage .. Cellular
swelling massive influx of calcium .
Mitochondrial damage , denaturation of cell
proteins , cell death.
34- Apoptosis
- Programmed physiological cell death that
removes unwanted cells - - Cell deletion without rupture of the cell
that otherwise would elicit the inflammatory
process ( aka necrosis - gt Helps to maintain homestasis growth in
tissue - - Distinguished from necrosis
- gt Greek term meaning falling away from
- - Involutional process similar to
physiologic loss of leaves - from a tree
- gt Has subtle cellular damage
- - With enzymes causes nuclear
codensation - fragmentation
35- gt important mechanism for the removal of cells
with irreparable - - Free radicals , viruses , cytotoxic
immune - mechanism
- - If falls then can lead tom cancers ,
viral - infections autoimmune diseases.
- gt Plays a role in wound healing
- gt Also important mechanism for physiologic cell
removal during embryogenesis in programmed cell
cycling ( e.g. endometrial cells during
menstruation )
36- Morphologic characteristics
- - Tendency to involve single isolated cells or
small clusters of cell s within a tissue. - - Progression through a series of changes marked
by lack of inflammatory response - gt Blebbing of plasma membrane ,
cytoplasmic shrinkage increased pink - staining , chromatin condensation
fragmentation. - gt Budding of cell separation of
membrane bound apoptotic bodies. - gt Phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies by
neighboring macrophages - adjacent normal cells.
- - Involution shrinkage of affected cells
cell fragments .. Small , round eosinophilic
masses with chromatin remnants - gt e.g. Councilman bodies of
viral hepatitis
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40- Biochemical events - active , gene expression
, protein synthesis , energy consumption - - Initiated by diverse injurious stimuli (
free radicals , radiation , toxic substances ,
withdrawal of growth factors or hormones) - - Signaling by molecules ( e.g. FAS ligand
, tumour necrosis - factor ) associated protein
- - Release of cytochrome c AIF (
apoptosis inducing factor) from mitochondria .
Caspase activation ( cytosolic cytotoxic
proteases major executioners) - gt Aspartate speciific cysteine
proteases. - gt Analogues of interleukin -1beta
converting enzyme
41- - Degradation of DNA by endonucleases ..
Nucleosomal chromatin fragments ( 180-200 base
pairs) laddering appearance of DNA on
electrophoresis - - Activation of transglutaminases ( cross-
link apoptotic cytoplasmic proteins) - - No inflammatory reaction
42- Apoptosis
- - Regulation
- Mediated by a number of genes their products
- gt bcl-2 , gene product inhibits apoptosis
- gt bax , gene product facilitates
apoptosis - gt p53 , gene product facilitates
apoptosis - by decreasing transcription of bcl-s
- increasing transcription of bax.
43The intrinsic (mitochondrial) pathway of
apoptosis. Death agonists cause changes in the
inner mitochondrial membrane, resulting in the
mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) and
release of cytochrome c and other pro-apoptotic
proteins into the cytosol, which activate caspases
44- Necrosis
- - One of the two morphologic patterns of cell
death ( the other is apoptosis) - Gross
irreversible cellular injury - - Sum of the degradative inflammatory reactions
occuring after tissue death caused by injury - -e.g. hypoxia , exposure to toxic
chemicals - - Passive process since does not require gene
involvement or new protein synthesis - - Triggers or elicits a marked inflammatory
response - - Liberation of lysosomal enzymes ,
digestion of cell membranes , disruption of cells
influx of macrophages due to release of
chemotactic factors. - - Removal of debris by phagocytic
macrophages.
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46- Necrosis
- general cellular characteristics
- - Change appears after the cells die.
- - Occurs within living organisms many
contiguous cells , fixed cells of pathologic
specimens are dead but not necrotic - - DNA fragmentation is haphazard with smudge
pattern on electrophoresis - gt Autolysis
- - Degradative reactions in cells
caused by intracellular - enzymes indigenous to the cells.
- - Postmortem autolysis occurs after
death of the entire - organism ? necrosis
47- gt Heterolysis Cellular degradation by enzymes
derived from sources extrinsic to the cell ( e.g.
, bacteria , leukocytes) increased pink
cytoplasm. - - Nuclear changes
- - Morphological recognizable light
microscope nuclear - changes . Progressive nuclear
condensation with - eventual disappearance of stainble
nuclei. - - Pyknosis the shrinkage of the
nucleus into a small - deeply basophilic or black
clumps of chromatin. - - Karyorrhexis a fragmentation
of the nucleus into - multiple small black dots or
pieces. - - Karyolysis the fading of the
nucleus less less - basophilic until it disappears.
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49Shrinkage (pyknosis), increased nuclear
basophilic staining (hyperchromasia), nuclear
fragmentation (karyorrhexis, karryolysis), are
classic features of apoptosis.
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51- - Cytoplasmic changes
- - Increased pink cytoplasm eosinophilic
, - glassy , less RNA
- - Generalized swelling of organelles ,
e.g. - endoplasmic reticulum mitochondria
- - Disruption of ribosomes
- - Autophagy ( lysis of the cell,s own
- contents)
- - Phagocytosis of deteriorating
organelles by - lysosomes.
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53- - Seven types of necrosis
- 1- Coagulative
- 2- Liquefactive
- 3- Caseous
- 4- Gangrenous
- 5- Fibrinous
- 6- Gummatous
- 7- Fat
54- 1- Coagulative necrosis
- - Most common type
- - Cause is most often from sudden loss of
- blood supply to an organ ( ischemia)
- - Heart kidney
- gt End arteries with limited
collateral - circulation
- - Adrenal glands
- - Results in denaturation of proteins
- - Early stages
- - Preservation of tissues
architecture
55- - Histology
- - General architecture well preserved
- - Progressive nuclear condensation
- with eventual disappearance of
- stainble nuclei
- - Increased pink cytoplasm
- ( eosinophilic , glassy) with
ghost - like structures.
56- Cardiac muscle
- - Hypertrophy
- - Normal
- - Ischemia
- - Infarction / necrosis
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66- 2- Liquefactive necrosis
- - Characterized by digestion of tissue
- - Gross liquid
- - Histology softening liquefaction of
tissue - - Usually ischemic injury to the CNS ..
Death of CNS - cells followed by autolysis
- - Usually bacterial infection origin , Ex.
Commonly seen in - brain
- - Also in suppurative infections ( pus
formation) - - Liquefied tissue debris intense
inflammatory - response of neutrophils abscess
- - Heterolytic mechanisms with
neutrophilic enzymes - . Digest leukocytes tissue
structure
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70Oedema due to acute apical periodontitis. An
acute periapical infection of a canine has
perforated the buccal plate of bone causing
oedema of the face this quickly subsided when
the infection was treated.
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72Liquifactive Necrosis Periapical Abscess
Acute chronic apical periodontitis. In this
early acute lesion inflammatory cells, mainly
neutrophil polymorphonuclear leukocytes, are seen
clustered around the apex of a non-vital tooth.
The inflammatory cells are spreading around and
into bone and there has not yet been time for
significant bone resorption to develop.
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74- 3- Caseous necrosis
- - Gross cheese like ( caseous)
consistancy - - Histology
- - Architecture not preserved
- - Amorphous pink , granular appearance
- - Few nuclei but no ghost like
appearance - - Combines features of coagulative
liquefactive necrosis - - Occurs as part of granulomatous
inflammation - - Manifestation of partial
immunity caused by the - interction of T lymphocytes (
CD4 , CD8 ) , - macrophages , cytokines
- - Most often seen in tuberculosis
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78Caseous means cheese-like this is a GROSS
observation, not a microscopic one. Cheese has
less texture than meat, and is flaky. Many people
from Wisconsin have been called caseous, i.e.,
cheeseheads.
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80- 4- Gangrenous necrosis
- - Extensive
- - Most often due to interruption of blood
supply to lower extremities or bowel ( secondary
to vascular occlusion) - - Most often associated with bacterial
infections - gt Wet gangrene
- - Complicated by heterolysis
consequent - liquefactive necrosis .
- gt Dry gangrene
- - Coagulative necrosis without
liquefaction
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84- 5- Fibrinoid necrosis
- - Often associated with immune-mediated
vasculitis - - C.T. muscle replaced by homogenous pink
- material resembling fibrin Ex. Deposition
of - fibrin like material in the arterial
walls - - Histology
- - Smudgy pink appearance in vascular
walls - - Necrosis may or may not be present
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86- 6- Gummatous necrosis
- - Seen in granulomatous inflammation
- such as tertiary syphilis
- - Gross , rubbery
- - Histology
- - No architecture
- - Pink with few nuclei
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89- 7- Fat necrosis
- gt Traumatic - Following severe injury to
tissue with high fat content ( e.g. breast) - gt Enzymatic type
- - Pancreas ( complication of acute
haemorrhagic - pancreatitis
- - Proteolytic lipolytic enzymes diffuse
into the - inflammed tissue of the pancraetic
parenchyma . - - Can attract calcium . Fatty acids
form calcium salts - (saponification soap formation)
- -Histology - Necrotic fat cells , acute
inflammation , hemorrhage , calcium soap
formation , lipid-laden macrophages ( enzymatic
type) .
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93- - Aging
- gt Associated with degeneration loss of
function of many cellular systems - - Cumulative environmental exposure to
a causative agent .. Many important
diseases OR process of biological aging itself
94- - Cellular aging
- - Reduced mitochondrial oxygen
utilization - - Less synthesis of RNA DNA
- - Less capability for repair
- - Accumulation of lipofuscin
- - Changes to nuclear organelle
- morphology
- - Concept of a cellular lifespan
95- Theories of Aging
- - Programmed aging Limited number of cell
divisions or - neuroendocrine stimuli from brain or
endocrine glands stop - at certain age.
- - Inefficient DNA repair over time
proportion of cells carrying abnormal DNA
increases tissue function impaired nuclear
mitochondrial DNA - - Free radical damage Decreased scavening
systems - - Failure of protein catabolism
Inefficiency - - Summation of cumulative damage sustained
throughout life to any systems e.g. DNA damage ,
protein modification , free radical damage , or
disease