Apoptosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is necrosis?

A
  • usually in tissues where injury was extreme or sudden
  • mitochondria swells to “high amplitude swelling” and ATP production stops
  • starved of ATP, plasma membrane’s ion pumps fail, cell swells and bursts
  • intensely proinflammatory
  • requires debris removal, injury resolution and, if the storm has been damaged, scar formation
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2
Q

When does apoptosis occur?

A

cell death that is normal and predictable from relatively minor injury

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3
Q

What are the defining features of apoptosis?

A
  • early in process, produces signals on the cell that it is undergoing apoptosis -> membrane is intact when macrophage eats it
  • no release of proinflammatory release of debris
  • collapse of the nucleus; chromatin becomes supercondensed into, eventually, spherical beads
  • DNA fragmented into smaller units by endonuclease on the DNA linkers
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4
Q

What happens to the cell volume within the first few seconds of apoptosis?

A

it shrinks, losing about a third of its volume

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5
Q

What is one of the markers for apoptosis?

A

phospholipid phosphatidylserine, usually on the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer

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6
Q

What allows for phospholipid phosphatidylserine to be on the exterior of an apoptotic cell?

A

Scramblase, distribution of PS is equal on both sides

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7
Q

What enzyme prevents phospholipid phosphatidylserine from being on the exterior in a healthy cell?

A

flippase

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8
Q

What are apoptotic bodies?

A

after the cell loses 1/3 of it’s volume, tears itself into apoptotic bodies some of which contain chromatin

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9
Q

Does macrophages that recognize a cell as apoptotic become activated?

A

no, it’s anti-inflammatory

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10
Q

Does low-dose radiation kill lymphocytes?

A

no, it induces them to kill themselves and must express “death genes”
- theoretically, all cells have “death genes”

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11
Q

Why is morphogenetic death matter?

A
  • determines the final shape of body parts and organs
  • death by apoptosis between the digits give the final form to fingers and toes
  • neuro - cells that survive are the ones that made the best connection
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12
Q

How many times per second does mitosis occur in an adult human?

A

25 million times a second (so 25 million cells die)

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13
Q

What happens when apoptosis doesn’t occur in a steady state system?

A

a tumor - cancer progression can be caused by mutations that inhibit cell death (ex. p53 inactive)

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14
Q

What happens to the mitochondria in the beginning of apoptosis?

A
  • anti-apoptotic members of Bcl-2 protein family (Bcl-2 and Bcl-Xl) are replaced by pro-apoptotic signals Bim and PUMA
  • Triggers Bax to make the membrane permeable so it releases cytochrome C into the cytoplasm
  • activates Apaf-1 (cytoplasmic protein)
  • activates protease caspase-9
  • activates protease caspase-3
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15
Q

Caspase-9 is a ________ caspase, caspase-3 is an __________

A

Caspase-9 is a signal caspase, caspase-3 is an executioner

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16
Q

What instructs mutated or infected cells to undergo apoptosis?

A

cytotoxic T cells

17
Q

Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS)

A
  • lymphocytes cannot receive signal for apoptosis, so they don’t die
  • accumulates lymphocytes to create bulk of tissue looks like lymphoma or Hodgkin
  • mutations in either Fas or FasL
18
Q

What is the mechanism where cytotoxic T cells (CTL) triggers apoptosis?

A
  • CTL upregulates Fas ligand (FasL)
  • FasL engages Fas or CD95 on cell surface
  • CD95 recruits FADD to activate caspase-8
  • caspase-8 activates caspase-3 (same downstream effect)
19
Q

What does FLIP do?

A
  • competes with caspase-8 to bind with FADD
  • inhibits apoptosis signalling
  • viruses can gain v-FLIPs to keep the cell alive until they finish their cell cycle
20
Q

What is the most sensitive cell type to radiation?

A

lymphocytes - commits suicide, does not try to repair