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Updated: Oct 24 2022

Apoptosis

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  • Overview
    • Programmed cell death
      • requirements
        • ATP
        • functioning caspase enzymes for cellular degradation
          • break down cytoskeleton
          • degrade DNA
          • endonucleases cut at internucleosomal regions, resulting in segments that are multiples of 180 base pairs
    • Two pathways
      • intrinsic
        • occurs in response to cell injury, loss of stimulatory growth factors, or DNA damage
        • involved in embryogenesis
        • mediated by changes in levels of anti-apoptotic (Bcl-2) and pro-apoptotic (Bax) factors
          • leads to ↑ mitochondrial permeability and release of cytochrome c
            • release of cytochrome c activates caspase-9
          • Bcl-2 binds to cytochrome c preventing apoptosis and inhibits Apaf-1 (promotes activation of caspases)
            • overexpression of Bcl-2 leads to a ↓ in apoptosis leading to an ↑ of tumorigenesis.
            • p53 degrades Bcl-2 to promote apoptosis when DNA damage is severe
      • extrinsic
        • occurs in response to several external "death" signals
          • FAS ligand binding the FAS death receptor (CD95)
            • CD95 mediates a cascade of caspase activation via FADD, a death domain-containing adapter protein
          • Also mediated by TNF which acts in a similar fashion to FAS
          • killer CD8 T-cells kill virally infected cells
            • release perforin and granzyme B which damage the cell membrane and activate caspases
            • PD-1 and PD-L1 is a key pathway active in cancer cells
    • Mechanism
      • caspase cascade
        • regulation
          • pro-apoptotic factors
            • Bax
              • activated by p53
                • absent in Li-Fraumeni syndrome
                  • presents with high frequency of solid tumors
              • antagonizes Bcl-2
              • promotes release of mitochondrial cytochrome c into the cytosol
          • anti-apoptotic factors
            • Bcl-2
              • prevents cytochrome c from being released and thus inhibits activation of caspase-9
        • caspases - inactive enzymes such as proteases and endonucleases
          • activated by intrinsic and extrinsic pathways
          • endonuclease activity leads to pyknosis (nuclear condensation)
          • protease activity leads to cytoskeleton breakdown
        • membrane begins to bleb containing cellular fragments
          • apoptotic bodies break off and are phagocytosed by macrophages
    • Key principles
      • distinct histological changes
        • cell shrinkage
        • pyknosis
        • eosinophilic cytoplasm
        • membrane blebbing
        • nuclear fragmentation (karyorrhexis)
        • nuclear fading
        • formation of apoptotic bodies
      • lack of inflammation
      • typically involves single or specific groups of cells leaving tissue architecture intact
    • Examples
      • menstrual shedding of endometrium
        • apoptosis induced in the endometrium when estrogen and progesterone levels decrease
      • destruction of specific cells during embyrogenesis
        • loss of Mullerian structures in males due to Mullerian inhibititory factor
      • virally infected cells
        • apoptosis induced by cytotoxic T-cells
      • embryogenesis
        • apoptosis induced in skin between fingers
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