Necrosis
- Necrosis: death of tissues
- No energy required
- Always pathological
Coagulative necrosis
- Preservation of cell outline
- Microenvironment too toxic for proteolysis – cells can’t clear up mess
- Common, often seen in MI
Liquefactive necrosis
- No cell structure remains
- Viscous mass of dead cells left behind - pus
- Bacterial + fungal infections, brain injury
Caseous necrosis
- ‘Cheesy’
- TB
Apoptosis
- Apoptosis: programmed cell death in response to specific signals
- Requires energy
- May be either physiological (normal growth, removal of self-reactive lymphocytes, hormonal-dependent involution) or pathological (injury, chemo, viral infection)
Pathways for apoptosis
Extrinsic
- Initiated by death receptors which activate caspases
- Fas: recognition of self
- Apoptosis in lymphocytes
- Fas mutations → autoimmune diseases
- TNF: apoptosis in association with inflammation
Intrinsic
- Mitochondrial pathway
- Growth signals promote anti-apoptotic molecules in mitochondrial membrane - replaced by Bax + Bak when removed which stimulate caspase release
p53
- Senses damage to DNA, can halt cell cycle
- If DNA can’t be repaired, stimulates caspases
Cellular aging
- Many causes
- Oxidative stress - free radical damage
- Accumulation of metabolic by-products - lipofuscin
- Calorie restriction can extend life - reduces IGF signaling which can silence specific genes