Apoptosis | Apoptosis in Pathological and Physiological context | Molecular pathway of apoptosis
What is Apoptosis?
Overview of Apoptosis
- Apoptosis, derived from Greek meaning "falling off," is a type of programmed cell death characterized by cell shrinkage and the formation of apoptotic bodies.
- This process involves intrinsic enzymes that degrade cellular DNA and proteins, leading to auto-destruction without causing inflammation.
Comparison with Necrosis
- Unlike necrosis, apoptosis maintains plasma membrane integrity while altering its composition to attract phagocytes for cleanup.
- Necrosis typically results in an inflammatory response due to cytoplasmic leakage, contrasting with the non-inflammatory nature of apoptosis.
Types of Apoptosis
Subtypes of Apoptosis
- Apoptosis can be classified into two main subtypes: pathological apoptosis (occurring during infections or diseases) and physiological apoptosis (essential for development).
Role in Development
- Physiological apoptosis plays a crucial role in human development, such as digit separation at birth where cells die to sculpt new structures.
- Examples include tadpole tail loss in frogs and the death of transient cell populations like Cajal-Retzius cells during brain development.
Apoptosis in Immune Response
Importance in Immunology
- In the immune system, particularly within lymph nodes, immature B cells undergo apoptosis if they exhibit low affinity for antigens, ensuring only high-affinity cells survive.
Pathological Circumstances Leading to Apoptosis
Triggers for Pathological Apoptosis
- DNA breaks can trigger apoptosis when irreparable; this prevents further damage to surrounding cells.
- Accumulation of misfolded proteins leads to endoplasmic reticulum stress and subsequent activation of apoptotic pathways, common in neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's.
Molecular Pathways Regulating Apoptosis
Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Pathways
- Two primary pathways regulate apoptosis: the intrinsic pathway involving mitochondria and the extrinsic pathway relying on receptor-ligand interactions.
Extrinsic Pathway Details
- The extrinsic pathway includes receptors like Fas that bind ligands triggering initiator caspase activation leading to a cascade effect culminating in executioner caspases like caspase 3.
Intrinsic Pathway Details
Understanding Apoptosis and Its Detection
Role of Cytochrome C in Apoptosis
- Cytochrome c is crucial in the electron transport chain; its leakage into the cytoplasm indicates cellular distress, triggering apoptosis.
- The process converges at caspase-3 cleavage, which executes apoptosis by leading to DNA fragmentation and organelle destruction.
Mechanism of Viral Infection and Apoptosis
- During viral infections, specific cell types utilize class 1 MHC generation machinery to present viral proteins on their surface.
- CD8 positive cytotoxic T cells recognize these peptides, releasing granules containing perforin and granzymes that induce apoptosis.
Pathways Triggering Apoptosis
- Perforin forms pores in the target cell membrane, allowing granzymes to enter and activate Bcl-2 family regulators, further promoting cytochrome c release.
- Interactions between Fas ligand and Fas can also trigger caspase-8 activation, leading to downstream effects that culminate in apoptosis.
Detecting Apoptosis: Techniques Used by Researchers
- Immunohistochemistry against cleaved caspase-3 helps identify cells undergoing or about to undergo apoptosis based on accumulation levels.
- The TUNEL assay utilizes terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) to label fragmented DNA characteristic of apoptotic cells.
Advanced Detection Methods
- Anexin V/PI assay combines annexin V binding to exposed phosphatidylserine with flow cytometry for detecting early apoptotic changes.
- In healthy cells, phosphatidylserine remains internal; during apoptosis, it flips outward—this change is a key indicator detected by annexin V.
Understanding Cell Viability Through Markers
- Propidium iodide serves as a late-stage apoptosis marker; its presence indicates significant cellular damage.
- Distinguishing between viable cells, late-stage apoptosis, necrosis involves analyzing annexin V binding alongside propidium iodide uptake.
Conclusion on Apoptosis Mechanisms
- Unlike necrosis which triggers inflammation through cytokine secretion, apoptosis does not evoke such responses.
Understanding Necroptosis and Its Implications
Overview of Necroptosis
- Necroptosis is described as a hybrid form of cell death that combines characteristics of necrosis and apoptosis, indicating a highly regulated process.
- This type of cell death involves specific cytokine secretion leading to robust inflammation, which distinguishes it from traditional necrosis.
Characteristics of Necroptosis
- Key features include loss of ATP, cellular swelling, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and the release of lysosomal enzymes.
- These characteristics are significant markers for identifying this particular mode of cell death in biological studies.
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