Cellular Adaptations in Disease
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Transcript Cellular Adaptations in Disease
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences
Semester 3
Pathology Course
P3
Cellular Adaptations in
Disease
Prof. James Lowe
5th October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Overview
Adaptability of cells to an altered
environment
Physiological
and pathological stimuli
Changes in growth pattern
Hyperplasia,
hypertrophy, atrophy,
involution, metaplasia
Apoptosis
Growth factors
Role
in altered environment
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Why is this important?
Extremely common responses in disease
Certain adaptations in growth act as a
fertile ground for the later development
of neoplasia - cancer formation…
Nomenclature is used in clinical work.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Adaptability of cells to an
altered environment
Cells are constantly exposed to changes
in their environment
Cells can adapt to acceptable changes in
their environment by modifying
metabolism or growth pattern
Environmental changes can be
physiological or pathological
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Examples of pathological
stimuli
Nutritional
Chemical agents
Immune
Infections
Endocrine
Anoxia
Physical agents
Genetic
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Metabolic regulation
Cells may adapt by metabolic regulation
Induction
of enzyme
Downregulation of enzyme
Increased synthesis of product
Reduced secretion of product
Metabolic adaptation is usually not
associated with morphological changes
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Cell stress response
The cell stress response allows cells to
survive pathological stimuli
Housekeeping
genes switched off
Cell stress genes switched on
Cells stress proteins are expressed in
cells (also called heat shock proteins)
Cell stress proteins are cytoprotective
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Cell stress proteins
Small cell stress proteins act as
molecular chaperones and prevent
misfolding of proteins
Ubiquitin links to damaged proteins and
flags them for elimination by the cell
Other groups of cell stress proteins have
roles in the nucleus.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Ubiquitin system
Free
ubiquitin
Activated
ubiquitin
proteosome
Degraded
protein
Damaged protein
Ubiquitinated protein
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Increased functional
demand
Increased functional demand can be met
by two main responses
Increase
in cell size: hypertrophy
Increase
in cell number: hyperplasia
These may occur independently or
together.
Reflected by an increase in size and
weight of an organ
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Physiological hypertrophy
Skeletal muscle hypertrophy in response to exercise
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Cellular adaptations in disease
Pathological hypertrophy
Myocardium in hypertensive heart disease
LV=left ventricle
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Pathological hypertrophy
Myocardium in hypertensive heart disease
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Physiological hyperplasia
Endometrium in the menstrual cycle
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Physiological hyperplasia
Pregnant uterus
Normal uterus
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Pathological hyperplasia
Normal skin
Hyperplasia after trauma
RP = rete peg
DP = dermal papilla
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Hyperplasia may be nodular
Hyperplasia may occur in a non-uniform
pattern in an organ or tissue - termed
nodular hyperplasia
Examples include
hyperplasia
of the prostate gland
hyperplasia of the breast
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Nodular hyperplasia of
prostate
From a young
man showing
uniform texture
of gland
From an elderly
man showing
irregular
hyperplastic
nodules. This
would cause
obstruction
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Reduced demand for cell
activity
Reduction in the volume of a tissue is
termed atrophy
reduction
in cell volume
reduction in cell number
Cell loss is commonly replaced by either
adipose tissue or fibrous tissue
Refelected in a reduced size and mass of
an organ
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Common causes of atrophy
Denervation
Immobilisation
Reduced endocrine stimulation
Ischaemia
Ageing
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Cellular adaptations in disease
Pathological atrophy
A= atrophic skeletal muscle fibres
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Cellular adaptations in disease
Other causes of a small
organ other than atrophy
Hypoplasia: incomplete growth of an
organ
Agenesis: complete failure of
development of an organ in
embryogenesis
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Physiological atrophy is
termed involution
Most instances of involution are the
result of withdrawal of an endocrine
stimulus
Examples of involution
breast
after cessation of lactation
uterus after parturition
thyroid after puberty
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Events in cell atrophy
Cell components are removed by
degradative systems
cytosolic
proteolysis - ubiquitin system
autophagy: elements enwrapped by internal
membrane systems and fused with the
lysosomal system
Residual lipid material may remain in
cells as a brown material termed
lipofuscin
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Reduction in cell number is
through programmed cell
death
Certain trophic signal to cells can lead to
a specific form of cell death
Cell death is brought about by precise
metabolic systems
The main type of programmed cell death
is termed apoptosis
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis
Normal cells are closely anchored by cell junctions
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Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis: first stage...
Cells lose contact and round up. There is nuclear
condensation.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis next stage...
Apoptotic cell undergoes fragmentation to form apoptotic
bodies
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Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis final event...
Apoptotic fragments are recognised by local cells and
phagocytes, are internalised, and degraded.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis biology
Cell death pathways exist in the cell
metabolism controlled by the action of
protease enzymes termed CASPASES
DNA is
cleaved into fragments in between
nuceosomes by endonucleases
Protein in cells is cross linked by
transglutaminases
Cell death pathways can be triggered by
several factors….
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Apoptosis triggers….
Surface receptor activation
Surface membrane damage
Damage to mitochondrial membranes
DNA damage
Whether a cell lives or dies depends on the
balance between pro-apoptotic and antiapoptotic factors
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Change in cell differentiation
Cells may respond to stimuli by a change
in terminal differentiation
This process is termed metaplasia
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Examples of metaplasia
Bladder transitional epithelium (T) with metaplasia to
squamous epithelium (S) in response to a bladder stone…
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Example of metaplasia
Urothelium in response to stone
transitional
Respiratory mucosa in response to
smoking
Ciliated
epithelium to squamous
columnar epithelium to squamous
Connective tissue in response to trauma
Collagenous
tissue to osseous tissue
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Growth factors
Growth factors and their receptors
control cell growth
In disease, cell adaptations are controlled
by the action of growth factors linking to
nuclear transcription factors via
secondary messenger systems.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Summary
Cells adapt to altered environment
Metabolic adaptation
Cell stress response
Changes in growth pattern
Hyperplasia,
hypertrophy, atrophy,
involution, metaplasia
Growth factors, controlling proliferation
or cell death, play a key role in cell
adaptations in disease
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999
Cellular adaptations in disease
Links to future work...
Cell biology of apoptosis will be
continued when we consider neoplasia
and in MM course
Cell biology of growth factors will be
continued when we consider healing and
repair and will also crop up in study of
neoplasia.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, October 1999