Cartilage Handout Flashcards

1
Q

locations of hyaline cartilage

A

nasal, costal, laryngeal, tracheal, bronchial, endplate of bones

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2
Q

locations of elastic cartilage

A

auricular, external auditory meatus, auditory tube, laryngeal, epiglottis

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3
Q

locations of fibrocartilage

A

intervertebral disk, symphysis, articular disks, tendon insertions

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4
Q

synovial joints contain what cartilage?

A

specialized type of hyaline cartilage: articular cartilage

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5
Q

chrondrocytes

A

cartilage cells, produce cartilage matrix. oval/round, basophilic cytoplsm. also secrete enzymes that can degrade CM. maintain integrity of CM.

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6
Q

cartilage matrix components

A

fibers, ground substance, noncollagenous multiadhesive glycoproteins

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7
Q

fibers

A

give mechanical stability to ground substance, predominant type in CM is cartilage-specific collagens

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8
Q

type II collagen

A

predominant isoform of cartilage-specific collagens.

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9
Q

cartilage collagens

A

type II, IX, X and XI. type VI is at periphery of chondrocyte (link btwn chondrocyte and cartilage matrix)

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10
Q

type II

A

most abundant of cartilage-specific collagens, mech stability for matrix

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11
Q

type IX

A

stabilizes type II, facilitating collagen fibril-proteoglycan interaction

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12
Q

type X

A

assoc w hypertrophic regions in cartilage where it organizes collagen fibrils into a 3D lattice

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13
Q

type XI

A

regulates type II fibril size

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14
Q

ground substance

A

hydrated gel: water, ions, proteoglycans (predominant component of CM)

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15
Q

aggrecan

A

predominant proteoglycan monomer

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16
Q

multimolecular proteoglycan aggregates

A

formed by aggrecan monomers bound to central hyaluronate backbone. dense negative charge, keeps them expanded. H20 and Na attracted to neg charges hydrates the CM

17
Q

noncollagenous multiadhesive glycoproteins

A

components of CM. small regulatory and structural proteins that influence interactions btwn chondrocytes and ECM. chondronectin, tenascin and anchorin CII. markers of cartilage turnover and degeneration.

18
Q

isogenous groups or cell nests

A

clusters of chondrocytes.

19
Q

lacunae

A

space w/in CM that chondrocytes occupy

20
Q

chondroclasts

A

multinucleated cells that degrade calcified cartilage. derived from monocytes, similar to osteoclasts. can give rise to tumors.

21
Q

hormones affecting sulfated GAG synthesis by chondrocytes

A

increase synthesis: growth hormone, thyroxin, testosterone. decrease synthesis: cortisone, hydrocortisone, estradiol

22
Q

perichondrium

A

outer part = fibrous connective tissue, type I collagen, secreted by fibroblasts (contains capillary plexus, nerves & lymph). inner part = flattened chondrogenic cells, can become chrondroblasts

23
Q

becoming a chondrocyte

A

once a chondroblast surrounds itself w cartilage matrix, it becomes a chondrocyte

24
Q

chondroblasts derivation

A

in embryo, derived directly from mesenchyme

25
Q

nourishment of cartilage

A

nourished by diffusion thru CM. needs to be hydrated. some water is loosely bound, allowing diffusion. chondrocytes have a high metabolic rate. CM has no lymph or nerve endings.

26
Q

3 types of cartilage

A

hyaline (most common), elastic, fibrocartilage

27
Q

LM characteristics of hyaline cartilage

A

homogenous matrix. pericellular matrix surrounds chondrocyte, buffer btwn cell and territorial matrix. interterritorial matrix between lacunae- thick collagen fibers, most of the proteoglycan.

28
Q

specialized types of hyaline cartilage

A

articular cartilage: covers articular surface. arrangement allows them to distribute compressive forces. no perichondrium (smooth surface).
also epiphyseal plates.

29
Q

tidemark

A

boundary btwn mineralized deep zone and 3 unmineralized zones above it. thick band of mineralized matrix.

30
Q

elastic cartilage

A

yellowish. chondrocytes are randomly distributed within matrix, hyaline-like matrix surrounds chondrocytes. perichondrium present.

31
Q

fibrocartilage

A

white, opaque b/c type I collagen. linear arrangement. no perichondrium.

32
Q

2 ways cartilage can grow

A

interstitial growth (expands from within, in young cartilage w/ more matrix plasticity, imp w/ epiphysial cartilage & long bone growth) AND appositional growth (growth from surface)

33
Q

appositional growth mech

A

inner layer of perichondrium contains chondrogenic cells which can become chondroblasts that express SOX 9. secrete CM and become enclosed w/in it, and as a result new cartilage is added to surface of existing cartilage element.

34
Q

age related changes to cartilage

A

affects matrix org, mechanical props & chondrocyte fxn. can get fibrillation, ulceration, chondromalacia.

35
Q

degenerative changes in articular cartilage

A

arthritis. OA (progressive loss of articular cartilage that can’t be repaired) vs RA (inflammatory rxn vs synovium of join, chronic, can lead to destruction of joint. IL-1 and TNF-a cause degradation of core protein w/in proteoglycan aggregates)

36
Q

repair of articular cartilage

A

injury not extending across tidemark doesn’t heal due to lack of influx of chondrogenic cells, fibrin clot or growth factors. if injury extends into bone, repair is incomplete & doesn’t restore normal composition/mechanical properties to CM

37
Q

intervertebral discs & degenerative changes

A

decrease in water d/t decrease in water content in nucleus pulposis & fewer proteoglycans bind water. size of aggrecan molecules decreases. nucleus becomes firm. tears appear in annulus fibrosis. increased probability of mech failure, disk herniation.

38
Q

mineralization of cartilage

A

CM loses resilience, can occur as a result of aging or pathological change. stiffen matrix, cause loss of resilience.