Lecture 25 - Cell Death Flashcards

1
Q

why do cells undergo apoptosis?

A
  • embryonic development requires the elimination of excess cells
  • cells that sustain irreparable genomic damage need to be removed
  • removal of cells that aren’t useful anymore
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2
Q

failure to carry out apoptosis leads to…

A

cancer

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3
Q

overzealous apoptosis leads to…

A

diabetes

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4
Q

what characterizes apoptosis?

A
  1. overall shrinkage in volume of the cell and nucleus
  2. loss of adhesion to neighbouring cells
  3. formation of blebs on the cell surface
  4. fragmentation of the genome
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5
Q

what engulfed cell corpses through phagocytosis?

A

neutrophils or macrophages

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6
Q

def: less orderly form of cell death

A

necroptosis

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7
Q

what characterizes necroptosis?

A
  • swelling of the cell and internal organelles
  • membrane breakdown
  • leakage of the cell contents into the extracellular space
  • the induction of inflammation
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8
Q

why does necropolis usually happen?

A

when cells fail to undergo apoptosis following exposure to stressors

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9
Q

how can necroptosis be beneficial?

A

can lead to an inflammation response

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10
Q

apoptosis is like __________ ______________
necroptosis is like __________ _____________

A

controlled implosion
uncontrolled explosion

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11
Q

def: group of cysteine proteases that are responsible for triggering most of the changes during cell death

A

caspases

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12
Q

what do caspases cleave?

A
  • cytoskeletal compnents, disrupting cell shape
  • lamins, breaking down nucleus
  • protein kinases, regulate cell adhesion
  • DNase inhibitors, activate DNases that fragment genome
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13
Q

what is induction of the apoptotic triggered by?

A
  1. external (extrinsic pathway)
  2. internal (intrinsic pathway)
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14
Q

what is the death receptor on the extracellular side of the cell?

A

trimeric transmembrane TNF receptor protein

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15
Q

what does receptor ligand binding induce in the TNF receptor, in extrinsic apoptosis?

A

induces conformational change of the TNF receptor, leading to the recruitment of cytosolic proteins

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16
Q

what leads to trans-autocleavage within the cell?

A

clustering of procaspases upon recruitment to membrane-bound (early) and cytosolic (late) complexes

17
Q

how does procaspase-8 become active/inactive?

A

inactive with pro region
active without pro region

18
Q

cascade-8 is an ___________ caspase that activates _________ caspases, which carry out the destruct of the cell

A

initiator, executioner

19
Q

what do internal signals for intrinsic cell death activate within the cells?

A

the Bcl-2 family of proteins, which can target Bax to the mitochondrial membrane

20
Q

what happens to Bax when it is target to the mitochondrial membrane?

A

undergoes a conformational change, which allows it to form a multi-subunit membrane channel in the outer mitochondrial membrane

21
Q

what resides in the inter membrane space and is released into the cytosol upon Bax forming a channel in the outer mitochondrial membrane?

A

cytochrome c

22
Q

what does cytochrome C do ?

A

forms a wheel-shaped complex, called an apoptosome, which brings together procaspase-9

23
Q

T or F: initiation of procaspase-9 does not require proteolytic cleavage, activated simply by joining the apoptosome

A

true

24
Q

in necroptosis, what is not activated?

A

caspase-8

25
Q

what happens in the necrosome?

A

series of interactions result in oligomerization an activation of RIP1K and RIP3K

26
Q

what does kinase RIP3K activate?

A

MLKL which gets targeted to the plasma membrane after it is phosphorylated

27
Q

what does MLKL do?

A

scrambles the phospholipids, causing the membrane to lose integrity and the cell dies