Lecture 13 Flashcards

1
Q

List characteristics of hematopoietic stem cells.

A

Are pluripotent (committed to either myeloid or lymphoid stem cell lines)

Can self-renew

Produce one of 2 kinds of multipotential precursor cells

Cannot be identified by morphology but can be recognized by cell surface markers

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2
Q

Compare Myeloid and Lymphoid multipotential precursor cells that are produced by hematopoietic stem cells

A

Myeloid: gives rise to all blood cell lines except lymphocytes

Lymphoid: give rise to lymphocytes

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3
Q

List the five categories of leukocytes and indicate which are granulocytes and which are agranulocytes.

A

Neutrophils (granulocyte)

Basophils (granulocyte)

Eosinophils (granulocyte)

Monocytes (agranulocyte)

Lymphocytes (agranulocyte)

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4
Q

what is the end product of Erythroid CFU’s

A

produces RBC’s

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5
Q

what is the end product of Megakaryocyte CFU’s

A

produces platelet-forming cells

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6
Q

what is the end product of Basophil CFU’s

A

WBC

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7
Q

what is the end product of Eosinophil CFU’s

A

WBC

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8
Q

what is the end product of Granulocyte-Macrophage CFU’s

A

WBC

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9
Q

list the developmental stages

of Macrophages and indicate which cell stages can divide and which are normally found in the circulation

A

Monoblast *

Promonocyte

Monocyte **

Macrophage

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10
Q

list the developmental stages

of Neutrophils and indicate which cell stages can divide and which are normally found in the circulation

A

Myeloblast *

Promyelocyte *

Myelocyte *

Metamyelocyte

Band Cell **

Neutrophil **

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11
Q

list the developmental stages

of Eosinophils and indicate which cell stages can divide and which are normally found in the circulation

A

Myeloblast *

Promyelocyte *

Myelocyte *

Metamyelocyte

Band Cell **

Eosinophil **

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12
Q

list the developmental stages

of Basophils and indicate which cell stages can divide and which are normally found in the circulation

A

Myeloblast *

Promyelocyte *

Myelocyte *

Metamyelocyte

Band Cell **

Basophil **

(Same as Eosinophil)

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13
Q

Describe the role of ferrotransferrin in the transfer and uptake of iron

A

Ferrotransferin binds to a transferrin receptor dimer and is then internalized into the cell

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14
Q

describe the process of iron transfer and reuptake in a cell (be sure to mention ferrotransferrin and apotransferritin)

A

The low pH value in the endosome that endocytoses the ferrotransferrin-transferrin receptor complex, dissociates Fe3+ into the cytosol of the cell and what’s still bound to the transferrin receptor is known as apoferritin

The Apoferritin-transferrin receptor complex is then returned to the plasma membrane where the neutral pH allows apoferritin to dissociate from the transferrin receptor, into the extracellular space

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15
Q

List the 3 major groups of hematopoietic growth factors

A

Colony-stimulating factors

Erythropoietin and Thrombopoietin

Cytokines (primarily interleukins)

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16
Q

For each of the three groups of colony-stimulating factors, indicate source of origin and role in hematopoiesis.

A

Granulocyte/monocyte CSF’s: produced by endothelial cells, T cells, fibroblasts, and monocytes

Granulocyte CSF’s: produced by endothelial cells, fibroblasts and macrophages

Monocyte CSF’s: N/A

17
Q

What are the sources of Erythropoietin and Thrombopoietin?

A

Erythropoietin: produced in the kidney in a response to a decrease in O2 saturation

Thrombopoietin: produced in the kidney, parenchymal cells, and sinusoidal endothelial cells in the liver

18
Q

What is the role of erythropoietin in hematopoiesis?

A

once in the bone marrow, EPO induces the binding of STAT5 to JAK2, which phosphorylates STAT5 and sends it into the nucleus to turn on RBC synthesis genes

19
Q

What is the role of thrombopoietin in hematopoiesis?

A

directs the formation of megakaryoblasts

20
Q

What do cytokines do?

A

mediate positive and negative effects on cellular quiescence, apoptosis, proliferation, and differentiation by engaging specific receptors and activating these pathways

21
Q

List examples of cytokines and differentiate the most common kind

A

Interleukins (most common)

Interleukin-3

GM-CSF

Fit-3 ligand

Kit ligand