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Cell Injury and Cell Death Nirush Lertprasertsuke, M.D. Department of Pathology Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University.

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Presentation on theme: "Cell Injury and Cell Death Nirush Lertprasertsuke, M.D. Department of Pathology Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cell Injury and Cell Death Nirush Lertprasertsuke, M.D. Department of Pathology Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University

2 Cell Injury Normal cell: homeostasis Sublethal injury: reversible injury Irreversible injury Cell death

3 Normal homeostasis Genetic programs –metabolism –differentiation –specialization Constraints of neighboring cells Availability of metabotic substrates

4 Cellular Responses to Injury Acute cell injury Reversible cell injury Cell death Subcellular alterations in sublethal and chronic injury Cellular adaptations: ~trophy/~plasia Intracellular accumulations Pathologic calcifications Cell aging

5 Causes of cell injury Oxygen Deprivation: hypoxia/ischemia Physical agents Chemical agents and drugs Infectious agents Immunologic reactions Genetic derangements Nutritional imbalances: self-imposed

6 Principles of cell injury Stimulus: type, duration, severity Cell: type, state, adaptability Cellular targets –cell membranes: integrity –mitochondria: aerobic respiration –cytoskeleton: protein synthesis –cellular DNA: genetic apparatus Structural and biochemical elements

7 Molecular mechanisms (1) ATP loss causes failure of biosynthesis and ion pumps: ‘cloudy swelling’ Cytosolic free Ca is a potent destructive agents: activates intracellular enzymes and causes cell death –protein kinases: phosphorylation of protein –phospholipases: membrane damage –proteases: cytoskeletal disassembly

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11 Reactive oxygen metabolites (free radicals) damage cells: O(-), OH(-), H2O2 –peroxidation of lipids (cell memb.) –thiol-containing protein damage (ion pump) –DNA damage (protein synthesis) –mitochondrial damage (Ca influx) Membrane and cytoskeletal damage –immune-mediated injury Molecular mechanisms (2)

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13 Morphology of Reversible cell injury Ultrastructural damage to mitochondria –Low-amplitude swelling –(High-amplitude swelling: irreversible) Swelling of cellular organelles: hydropic degeneration/cloudy swelling Fatty change: sublethal impairment of metabolism: liver

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19 Morphology of Cell death Lysis: Disintegration of cellular structure followed by dissolution Necrosis: spectrum ofmorphologic changes that follow cell death in living tissue Apoptosis: “programmed cell death”- elimination of unwanted host cells

20 Necrosis Concurrent processes: –Enzymic digestion: lysis autolysis: lysosomes of the dead cells heterolysis: immigrant leukocytes –Denaturation of proteins Intense eosinophilia Nonspecific DNA breakdown –Pyknosis –Karyorhexis –Karyolysis

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24 Patterns of Necrosis Coagulative necrosis Liquefactive necrosis Caseous necrosis Fat necrosis Gangrenous necrosis Fibrinoid necrosis

25 Coagulative necrosis Dead tissue: firm and pale Intact c.outlines and t.architecture Intracellular acidosis denatures enzymes Occlusion of arterial supply Enzymes used in Dx of tissue damage –Myocardium: CK (MB isoform), AST, LDH –Hepatocytes: ALT –Striated muscle: CK (MM isoform) –Exocrine pancreas: amylase

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27 Liquefactive necrosis Semi-liquid viscous tissue Potent hydrolytic enzymes Examples –Hypoxic dead in the CNS: lysosomal enzymes of the neurons and the relative lack of extracellular structural protein –Bacterial infection: pus neutrophil hydrolases: acute inflammation

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29 Caseous necrosis Soft and white: like cream cheese Amorphous eosinophilic mass, loss of tissue architecture Associated with granulomatous inflammation(reaction) in Tuberculosis

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31 Fat necrosis Hard yellow-gray material: fat tissue Examples: –Retroperitoneal fat necrosis associated with acute of the pancreas –Traumatic fat necosis: breast, buttock

32 Gangrenous necosis Mummified darkened and shrinkage Coagulative necrosis only or modified by liquefactive necrosis Dry gangrene: limb (lower leg/toe) Wet gangrene: hollow viscera (GI tract) –hemorrhage within the tissue

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34 Fibrinoid necrosis Deposits of fibrin to the wall of necrotic vessels Causes: –Vasculitis: autoimmune disease –Hypertension

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36 Apoptosis Settings During development Homeostatic mechanism to maintain cell populations in tissue: involution Defense mechanism e.g. immune reaction Injury –viral infection –low doses of injurious stimuli Aging

37 Apoptosis Mechanisms Signaling pathways –Transmembrane signals: hormone, cytokines –Intracellular signaling: heat, viral infection Control and integration stage: adaptor proteins, Bcl-2, p53, granzyme B Execution phase: endonuclease activation, catabolism of cytoskeleton Removal of dead cells

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43 Apoptosis Biochemical features Protein Cleavages:cysteine proteases –caspases: nuclear scaffold cytoskeletal proteins Protein cross-linking: transglutaminase DNA breakdown: endonucleases –50~300 kb and then 180~200 bp Phagocytic recognition – phosphatidylserine

44 Apoptosis Morphology Cell shrinkage Chromatin condensation Formation of cytoplasmic blebs and apoptotic bodies Phagocytosis of apoptotic cells/bodies Single cell or small clusters with intense eosinophilic cytoplasm and dense chromatin fragments

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