Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults Flashcards

1
Q

Increase in SIZE of cells resulting in increased size of organ; cellular adaptation of non-dividing cells (i.e. myocardial fibers).

A

Hypertrophy

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2
Q

Increase in NUMBER of cells; examples: BPH, papilloma virus infection

A

Hyperplasia

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3
Q

Reduction in the size of an organ or tissue due to decrease in cell size and number; example: Alzheimer’s disease

A

Atrophy

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4
Q

A reversible change in which one differentiated cell type is replaced by another cell type; example: Barrett esophagus

A

Metaplasia

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5
Q

The first manifestation of almost all forms of injury to cells; due to influx of ions (and water) due to failure of energy-dependent ion pumps.

A

Cellular swelling

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6
Q

A type of reversible injury, characterized by appearance of lipid vacuoles in the cytoplasm; often seen in cells participating in fat metabolism (liver, heart).

A

Fatty change (Steatosis)

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7
Q

Type of cell death, which results from a pathologic cell injury; undergoes cellular swelling and eventual pyknosis, karyorrhexis, and karyolysis.

A

Necrosis

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8
Q

It is the irreversible condensation of chromatin in the nucleus of a cell undergoing necrosis or apoptosis; there is nuclear shrinkage with increased basophilia.

A

Pyknosis

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9
Q

It is the destructive fragmentation of the nucleus of a dying cell.

A

Karyorrhexis

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10
Q

It is the complete dissolution of the chromatin of a dying cell.

A

Karyolysis

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11
Q

Type of cell death, which is energy-dependent, tightly regulated, and associated with normal cellular functions; often physiologic; the cell undergoes shrinkage and fragmentation.

A

Apoptosis

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12
Q

Pathway of apoptosis triggered by loss of survival signals, DNA damage and accumulation of misfolded proteins; inhibited by anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl family.

A

Mitochondrial/Intrinsic pathway

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13
Q

Initiator caspase for intrinsic pathway of apoptosis.

A

Caspase 9

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14
Q

Pathway of apoptosis responsible for elimination of self-reactive lymphocytes and damage by cytotoxic T lymphocytes; initiated by TNF receptors.

A

Death receptor/Extrinsic pathway

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15
Q

Initiator caspases for extrinsic pathway of apoptosis.

A

Caspase 8, 10

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16
Q

Executioner caspases.

A

Caspase 3, 6

17
Q

Regulated cell death that results in necrosis (morphologically); caspase-independent; activates RIP1 and RIP3 complexes that lead to increased ROS and decreased mitochondrial ATP production.

A

Necroptosis

18
Q

Type of apoptosis often seen in microbe-infected cells; caspase 1 releases IL-1, and together with caspase 11, causes cell injury.

A

Pyroptosis

19
Q

It involves sequestration of cellular organelles into cytoplasmic autophagic vacuoles that fuse with lysosomes and digest enclosed material; used as a survival mechanism under various stress conditions (i.e. nutrient deprivation).

A

Autophagy

20
Q

Marker for autophagy; involved in formation of autophagosome.

A

LC3

21
Q

A form of tissue necrosis in which the component cells are dead but the basic tissue architecture is preserved; affected tissues take on a firm texture; often seen in infarcts of all solid organs (heart, spleen, kidney) except the brain.

A

Coagulative necrosis

22
Q

Characterized by digestion of dead cells, resulting in transformation of the tissue into a liquid viscous mass; often seen in infections (pus) and in hypoxic death of cells within the CNS.

A

Liquefactive necrosis

23
Q

This term is usually applied to a limb, generally the lower leg, that has lost its blood supply and has undergone coagulative necrosis with superimposed liquefactive necrosis involving multiple tissue layers.

A

Gangrenous necrosis

24
Q

Friable, white appearance of necrosis; appears as a structureless collection of fragmented or lysed cells and amorphous granular debris enclosed within a distinctive inflammatory border (granuloma); “cheese-like”.

A

Caseous necrosis

25
Q

Refers to focal areas of fat destruction, typically seen in acute pancreatitis; there is release of activated pancreatic lipases into the substance of the pancreas and the peritoneal cavity; the foci of necrosis contain shadowy outlines of necrotic fat cells with basophilic calcium deposits (saponification), surrounded by an inflammatory reaction.

A

Fat necrosis

26
Q

A special form of necrosis usually seen in immune reactions involving blood vessels; deposits of immune complexes, together with fibrin that have leaked out of vessels, result in a bright pink and amorphous appearance in H&E stains, called “fibrinoid” (fibrin-like) by pathologists.

A

Fibrinoid necrosis

27
Q

Abnormal calcium deposition occurring in the absence of calcium metabolic derangements; examples: Psammoma bodies in cancers with papillary architecture and meningioma

A

Dystrophic calcification

28
Q

Effect of caloric restriction on longevity.

A

Increased due to decreased IGF-1 signaling

29
Q

Calcium deposition in normal tissues occurring in the presence of hypercalcemia; example: calcinosis

A

Metastatic calcification

30
Q

Proteins that are produced in response to food deprivation; with actions that lead to prolonged longevity (anti-apoptotic, anti-ROS).

A

Sirtuins