500 likes | 846 Views
PATHOLOGY vs Physiology. Normal cell. MEMBRANE Selective pemeability – ions Surface antigens & receptors NUCLEUS – DNA – control CYTOSKELETON. Organelles. Mitochondria Ribosomes Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus Lysosomes. CELL INJURY. Homeostasis, steady state,
E N D
Normal cell • MEMBRANE • Selective pemeability – ions • Surface antigens & receptors • NUCLEUS – DNA – control • CYTOSKELETON
Organelles • Mitochondria • Ribosomes • Endoplasmic reticulum • Golgi apparatus • Lysosomes
Homeostasis, steady state, can be altered. • Limited ways to respond to injury.
Cells can and must adapt to stimulus or stress In response to stress, cells may: – Adapt – Be reversibly injured – Die (irreversibly injured)
Other responses to stress Intracellular accumulations Pathologic calcification Cellular aging
CELL INJURY • Sequence of events that occur in a cell if the limits of adaptive response to a stimulus are exceeded
Causes of Cell Injury • Hypoxia and ischemia •“Chemical” agents •“Physical” agents •Infections •Immunological reactions •Genetic defects •Nutritional defects •Aging
Oxygen deficiency common and important – Hypoxia reduces aerobic oxidative respiration – Results from l) cardio respiratory failure, 2) loss of blood supply, 3) reduced transport of O2 in blood (i.e. anemia, or CO toxicity), 4) blockage of cell enzymes (cyanide) Compare with ischemia: loss of blood supply.
Myocardial infarction Cerebral infarction Renal atrophy HYPOXIC INJURY
Chemicals and drugs • Chemical poisons - cyanide, arsenic, mercury • Strong acids, alkalis • Environmental pollutants • Oxygen at high concentrations • Hypertonic glucose, salt • Alcohol, narcotic drugs
Chemicals, drugs, toxins multitude of mechanisms - block or stimulate cell membrane receptors, - alter specific enzyme systems, - produce toxic free radicals, - alter cell permeability, - damage chromosomes, - modify metabolic pathways, - damage structural components of cells.
Physical agents • Trauma, • extremes of heat and cold, • radiation, • electrical energy • Pressure changes
Infectious agentsMICROBIOLOGY – Viruses – Bacteria – Fungi – parasites
Immune dysfunction – Immunodeficiency - failure to respond due to congenital or acquired defects – Autoimmunity -- Immune response directed against host antigens – Hypersensitivity -- inappropriate or exaggerated response
Nutritional deficiency and imbalances – Protein-calorie deficiencies – Protein-calorie excess (obesity) – Vitamin & mineral imbalances
Workload imbalance – Overworked or under worked cells
Cancer Ehlers-Danlos GENETIC DERANGEMENTS Down's Syndrome
Free radicals • Free radicals are chemical species with a single unpaired electron in an outer orbital • Free radicals are chemically unstable and therefore readily react with other molecules, resulting in chemical damage • Free radicals initiate autocatalytic reactions; molecules that react with free radicals are in turn converted to free radicals
Reactive oxygen species: • Superoxide anion • Hydroxyl radical • Hydrogen peroxide
Free radicals initiated by: EXOGENOUS SOURCES: • Radiant energy: UV, X ray
Free radicals initiated by: • ENDOGENOUS SOURCES: • Inflammation: e.g. neutrophil killing • Chemicals/drugs &their metabolism • Redox reactions of normal metabolism • Transition metals: especially iron & copper, which donate or accept free electrons • Nitric oxide (just say NO!)
CELL INJURY BY FREE RADICALS • Lipid peroxidation of membranes • Oxidative modification of proteins • DNA Lesions
Protection from ROS Antioxidants block or scavenge • Vits. A,E,C • Binding of catalyzing iron & copper to transport proteins (e.g. transferrin, ceruloplasmin, lactoferrin, ferritin) • Enzymes: •Catalase (in peroxisomes) decomposes hydrogen peroxide •Superoxide dismutase converts superoxide to water and oxygen •Glutathione peroxidase catalyzes free radical breakdown
DISEASES CONGENITAL – genetic, non genetic ACQUIRED – • Infective • Inflammatory – injury & disordered repair • Immune • Metabolic • Hemodynamic • Cell growth
Others • Iatrogenic • Opportunistic • Hospital acquired infections
The cellular response depends on: • Type of lesion • Duration and severity • Type of cell • Physiologic state of the cell • Capacity of the cell for adaptation
Type, duration & severity of the injurious agent small dose of chemical toxin or short duration of ischemia cause reversible cell injury, while large dose of the same chemical agent or persistent ischemia causes cell death.
Type, status & adaptability of the target cell • nutritional and metabolic status, & adaptation of cell to a hostile environment determine the extent of cell injury skeletal muscles can withstand hypoxic injury for a longer time while cardiac muscles often suffer irreversible cell injury after 30-60 min of persistent ischemia.
Important susceptible cell components • Generation of ATP by aerobic respiration. • Integrity of the cell membrane (ionic & osmotic homeostasis) • Protein synthesis • Cytoskeleton • Genetic integrity
Cellular and biochemical sites of damage in cell injury • ATP decrease • Mitochondrial damage • Loss of calcium homeostasis • Oxidative stress
cell injury ATP is essential for Membrane transport, Protein synthesis, Lipid synthesis Phospholipid metabolism
Consequences of ↓ intracellular ATP •Plasma membrane sodium pump failure •Calcium influx •Altered energy metabolism •Reduction in protein synthesis •Unfolded protein response
Blood Clot Oxidative Phosphorylation HYPOXIA - ISCHEMIA MODEL Impaired function of the plasma membrane ATP-dependent Na+ pump O2 ATP Glycolysis Detachment of ribosomes
SEQUENTIAL CHANGES Failure of aerobic &switch to anaerobic respiration Rapid depletion of glycogen accumulation of lactic acid lowers the intracellular pH Intracellular acidosis-clumping of nuclear chromatin
Normally in the ATP dependent Na+-K+ pump there is transport of Na+ out of the cell and diffusion of K+ into the cell lowered ATP Na+ is retained within the cell K+ is diffused out of the cell This results in increased intracellular water accumulation to maintain the iso-osmatic condition (hydropic swelling)
As a result of continued hypoxia Ribosomes are detached from the granular endoplasmic reticulum Polysomes are reduced to monosomes Thus reduced protein synthesis
Ca++ Ca++ Ca++ Ca++ INDUCED CELL INJURY Cytoplasmic ionic Ca++ ATPase Phospholipase Protease Endonuclease ATP Phospholipids Protein DNA Disruption Damage
Mitochondrial Damage by: •Cytosolic Calcium influx •Oxidative stress •Phospholipase - breakdown of phospholipids - and sphingomyelin pathways
Mitochondrial damage results in •Mitochondrial permeability transition of inner mitochondrial membrane •Reversible but can become permanent and be death blow •Leakage of cytochrome c and initiation of apoptosis
Membrane permeability defectsresult in •Mitochondrial dysfunction •Loss of membrane phospholipids •Cytoskeletal abnormalities •ROS (reactive oxygen species) •Lipid breakdown products
Lysosomal membrane injury: Enzyme leakage and activation in cytoplasm →cell digestion, loss of glycogen, loss of RNA & DNA and eventually necrosis
Cell Injury and Cell Death • Point of no return: not precise • Two consistent characteristics of irreversibility 1. Inability to restore mitochondrial function 2. Severe cell membrane damage • Leak of lysosomal contents leading to cytoplasmic & nuclear degradation • Massive leak of intracellular substances and influx of calcium
CELLDEATH • NECROSIS • APOPTOSIS