1
Q

Where are lysosomes made?

A

→in the ER

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2
Q

What is the pH inside a lysosome

A

→4-5

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3
Q

why is the pH acidic inside a lysosome?

A

→enzymes need a low pH

→if the lysosome were to break the hydrolytic enzymes would be neutralized in the cytosol

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4
Q

how does the lysosome maintain the acidic pH ?

A

→hydrogen ion pump which requires ATP

→active transport of H+ ions from the cytoplasm

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5
Q

What are the two ways that substrates enter the lysosome?

A

→extracellular - endocytosis

→intracellular - microautophagy

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6
Q

How does LDL get into the lysosome?

A

→binds to LDL surface receptors

→receptors aggregate to form coated pits

→the pit folds inwards and the membrane detaches itself to form a closed coated vesicle.

→pH starts to drop so LDL is inside an endosome and the receptors return to the cell surface membrane.

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7
Q

what is LDL hydrolyzed into?

A

cholesteryl ester and fatty acid by lipase enzymes.

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8
Q

What modification do lysosomal enzymes have that others don’t?

A

mannose-6-phosphate

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9
Q

what is the name of the enzyme that adds the M6P modification?

A

phosphoryl transferase

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10
Q

Where do proteins that do not have the M6P modifications go?

A

the plasma membrane

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11
Q

what happens if there is no M6P modification?

A

The enzyme gets diverted and is secreted, substrate builds up inside the lysosome.

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12
Q

Describe the structure and function of lysosomes

A

→Cells contain over 100 individual lysosomes

→ each lysosome is surrounded by a single membrane

→ Lysosomal interior is acidic (pH 4-5)

→Lysosomes contain over 40 hydrolytic enzymes capable of degrading: lipids (lipases), carbohydrates (glycosidases), proteins (proteases)

→Carry out the controlled intracellular digestion of both extracellular materials & worn-out organelles

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13
Q

Describe substrate delivery to lysosomes

A

EXTRACELLULAR SUBSTRATES:
→ Fluid-phase endocytosis of molecules & lipoproteins

→Phagocytosis of particles ≥0.5 μm

INTRACELLULAR SUBSTRATES;
→Microautophagy (invagination of the lysosomal membrane)
→Macroautophagy (where the cytosol or organelles are wrapped in ER membrane, then fused with the lysosomes)
→Selective transport of proteins across the lysosomal membrane.

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14
Q

Describe the mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) pathway

A

→ digestive enzymes & membrane proteins of the lysosome are synthesised in the ER & transported through the Golgi apparatus to the trans-Golgi network.

→While in the ER & cis-Golgi network, the enzymes are tagged with a specific phosphorylated sugar group (mannose 6-phosphate).

→When they arrive in the trans-Golgi network they can be recognized by an appropriate receptor, the mannose 6-phosphate receptor.

→The tagging permits the enzymes to be sorted & packaged into transport vesicles, which bud off & deliver their contents to the lysosome via late endosomes.

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15
Q

Describe I-Cell disease and some symptoms

A

→It results from a defective phosphotransferase (GlcNAC).

Some of the symptoms are: 
→skeletal abnormalities 
→ development delay 
→ enlarged liver & spleen 
→ impaired hearing 
→ death from pneumonia or congestive heart failure, usually within the first 10 years.
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16
Q

How does I - Cell Disease Occur?

A
  1. Due to defective or missing GlcNAc phosphotransferase.
  2. Lysosomal enzymes are not phosphorylated in the cis Golgi network.
  3. The M6P receptors do not segregate them into the appropriate transport vesicles in the TGN.
  4. Instead, the lysosomal hydrolases are carried to the cell surface and secreted.
  5. No hydrolases in lysosomes = accumulation of undigested substrates in lysosomes.