Summary Apoptosis

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  • 1 Molecular and Biological Aspects of Apoptosis

  • 1.1 Types of cell death

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  • Autophagic cell death

    Dying cells displaying a large-scale accumulation of autophagosomes. Is considered as a pro-survival pathway in the dying cell.
  • 4 functions of programmed cell death

    1. Sculpting
    2. Deleting unwanted structures
    3. Controlling cell numbers
    4. Eliminating nonfunctional, harmful, abnormal, or misplaced cells
  • 1.2 Introduction

  • What are the different routes in the death pathway?

    1. Apoptosis (red): via caspase-9 activation and a mitochondrial route or directly via caspase-8 to caspase-3 as a primary effector caspase.
    2. Autophagic (pink): apoptosis-like
    3. Necrotic (black): osmotic rupture, or depletion of energy in the apoptotic route.
    4. Other (green)
  • Necrosis: morphological features

    • Loss of membrane integrity
    • Flocculation of chromatin
    • Swelling of the cell and lysis
    • No vesicle formation, complete lysis
    • Disintegration (swelling) of organelles
  • Apoptosis: morphological features

    • Membrane blebbing, but no loss of integrity
    • Aggregation of chromatin at the nuclear membrane
    • Cellular condensation (cell shrinkage)
    • Formation of membrane-bound vesicles (apoptotic bodies)
    • No disintegration of organelles; organelles remain intact
  • Necrosis: biochemical features

    • Loss of regulation of ion homeostasis
    • No energy requirement (passive process, also at 4 degrees)
    • Random digestion of DNA (smear of DNA on gel)
    • Postlytic DNA fragmentation (late event)
  • Apoptosis: biochemical features

    • A tightly regulated process involving activation and enzymatic steps
    • Energy (ATP)-dependent (active process, not at 4 degrees)
    • Non-random mono- and oligonucleosomal length fragmentation of DNA (ladder pattern on gel)
    • Prelytic DNA fragmentation (early event)
  • Necrosis: physiological significance

    • Death of cell groups
    • Evoked by non-physiological disturbances
    • Phagocytosis by macrophages
    • Significant inflammatory response
  • Apoptosis: physiological significance

    • Death of single, individual cell
    • Induced by physiological stimuli
    • Phagocytosis by adjacent cells or macrophages
    • No inflammatory response
  • Three phases of apoptosis

    1. Activation phase (death receptor signaling): via extrinsic or intrinsic pathway
    2. Execution phase (mitochondrial signaling)
    3. Burial phase (caspase cascade)
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