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Mechanisms of Human Disease exam questions and answers fully solved

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Mechanisms of Human Disease exam questions and answers fully solved Reversible injury - AnswersMild + transient, allows cells to adapt and return to normal Irreversible injury - AnswersSevere and progressive → cell death, cannot return to normal function Apoptosis vs necrosis - Answers• Apoptosis is benign and regulated, necrosis is unregulated and pro-inflammatory • Both are types of cell death Earliest manifestation of most cell injuries - AnswersCellular swelling Molecular changes that occur in cell injury - Answers• ↓Cellular energy due to ↓ATP synthesis induced by mitochondrial damage • Loss of calcium homeostasis • Disrupted membrane permeability of cell + organelle membranes • ↑Free radical production (ROS) • Molecular damage affecting macromolecules (DNA + proteins) first Protective response mechanisms in cell injury - Answers• Heat shock response (chaperone) proteins: expression activated when cell is stressed, protects proteins from damage by refolding misfolded proteins + eliminating damaged proteins • Enzymes remove free radicals • Pre-stressed tissues have been 'trained' to survive significant injury, physiological adaptation Progression of reversible to irreversible injury - Answers• Cell function decline • Biochemical alterations leading to cell death • Ultrastructural changes (cell swelling, fragmented nuclei) • Light microscopic changes (cytoplasmic, nuclear + fatty changes) • Gross morphological changes Hypoxia - Answers• Lack of oxygen due to ↓blood supply → ↓ATP production + accumulation of waste toxins (interfere with enzymes/trigger damage of cell molecules) • Outcome is time dependent: injury persists → damage increases Triggers of hypoxia - Answers• Ischaemia: inadequate/blocked blood supply; local (embolism) or systemic (cardiac failure) • Hypoxaemia: sustained oxygen deficiency; high altitude (low O2) or anaemia (abnormal haemoglobin) • Oxidative Phosphorylation Inhibition: prevents ETC; cyanide poisoning Ischaemia - Answers• ↓Oxidative phosphorylation → ↓ATP → 1 of 3 pathways • ↓ Na+ pump → ↑influx of Ca2+, H2O + Na+, ↑efflux of K+ → ER/cellular swelling, blebs, loss of microvilli • ↑ Anaerobic glycolysis → ↓glycogen, ↑lactic acid → ↓pH → clumping of nuclear chromatin • Detachment of ribosomes → ↓ protein synthesis Pathological effects of ROS - Answers• Produced by altered metabolism + inflammation • Lipid peroxidation → membrane damage • Protein modifications → breakdown, misfolding • DNA damage → mutations ROS elimination mechanisms - Answers• Conversion of O2- to H2O2 by SOD • Decomposition of H2O2 to H2O by glutathione peroxidase • ROS + ↓O2 → direct membrane damage via phospholipid loss, lipid breakdown + cytoskeletal damage • Sudden increase in oxygen can increase free radicals → reperfusion injury Necrosis - Answers• Reversible: surface blebs, increased eosinophilia of cytoplasm, swelling • Irreversible: loss of nuclei, fragmentation, cellular leakage • Morphological changes: cell swelling, nucleus: pyknosis (condensation) → karyorrhexis (fragmentation) → karyolysis (lysing by DNase), disrupted plasma membrane, cell contents digested by enzymes/may leak out, adjacent inflammation (cell bursts) Coagulative necrosis - Answers• Ischaemic necrosis + gangrene in lower limbs • Cells die but tissue architecture remains, maintains solid consistency • Necrotic cells removed by inflammatory cells (neutrophils) • Necrotic regions regenerate or replaced by scar (fibrosis) Liquefactive necrosis - Answers• Ischaemic necrosis in brain • Due to massive infiltration by neutrophils to form an abscess → high ROS + protease activity • Complete dissolution of necrotic tissue, cell architecture obliterated Causeous necrosis - Answers• Associated with granulomatous inflammation of tuberculosis + fungal infections • Accumulation of amorphous/unstructured debris within an area of necrosis • Tissue architecture lost + unrecognisable Infarction - Answers• Area of ischaemic necrosis in tissue/organ • Red/haemorrhagic: due to venous occlus

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Mechanisms of Human Disease exam questions and answers fully solved

Reversible injury - AnswersMild + transient, allows cells to adapt and return to normal

Irreversible injury - AnswersSevere and progressive → cell death, cannot return to normal
function

Apoptosis vs necrosis - Answers• Apoptosis is benign and regulated, necrosis is unregulated and
pro-inflammatory

• Both are types of cell death

Earliest manifestation of most cell injuries - AnswersCellular swelling

Molecular changes that occur in cell injury - Answers• ↓Cellular energy due to ↓ATP synthesis
induced by mitochondrial damage

• Loss of calcium homeostasis

• Disrupted membrane permeability of cell + organelle membranes

• ↑Free radical production (ROS)

• Molecular damage affecting macromolecules (DNA + proteins) first

Protective response mechanisms in cell injury - Answers• Heat shock response (chaperone)
proteins: expression activated when cell is stressed, protects proteins from damage by refolding
misfolded proteins + eliminating damaged proteins

• Enzymes remove free radicals

• Pre-stressed tissues have been 'trained' to survive significant injury, physiological adaptation

Progression of reversible to irreversible injury - Answers• Cell function decline

• Biochemical alterations leading to cell death

• Ultrastructural changes (cell swelling, fragmented nuclei)

• Light microscopic changes (cytoplasmic, nuclear + fatty changes)

• Gross morphological changes

Hypoxia - Answers• Lack of oxygen due to ↓blood supply → ↓ATP production + accumulation
of waste toxins (interfere with enzymes/trigger damage of cell molecules)

• Outcome is time dependent: injury persists → damage increases

,Triggers of hypoxia - Answers• Ischaemia: inadequate/blocked blood supply; local (embolism) or
systemic (cardiac failure)

• Hypoxaemia: sustained oxygen deficiency; high altitude (low O2) or anaemia (abnormal
haemoglobin)

• Oxidative Phosphorylation Inhibition: prevents ETC; cyanide poisoning

Ischaemia - Answers• ↓Oxidative phosphorylation → ↓ATP → 1 of 3 pathways

• ↓ Na+ pump → ↑influx of Ca2+, H2O + Na+, ↑efflux of K+ → ER/cellular swelling, blebs, loss
of microvilli

• ↑ Anaerobic glycolysis → ↓glycogen, ↑lactic acid → ↓pH → clumping of nuclear chromatin

• Detachment of ribosomes → ↓ protein synthesis

Pathological effects of ROS - Answers• Produced by altered metabolism + inflammation

• Lipid peroxidation → membrane damage

• Protein modifications → breakdown, misfolding

• DNA damage → mutations

ROS elimination mechanisms - Answers• Conversion of O2- to H2O2 by SOD

• Decomposition of H2O2 to H2O by glutathione peroxidase

• ROS + ↓O2 → direct membrane damage via phospholipid loss, lipid breakdown + cytoskeletal
damage

• Sudden increase in oxygen can increase free radicals → reperfusion injury

Necrosis - Answers• Reversible: surface blebs, increased eosinophilia of cytoplasm, swelling

• Irreversible: loss of nuclei, fragmentation, cellular leakage

• Morphological changes: cell swelling, nucleus: pyknosis (condensation) → karyorrhexis
(fragmentation) → karyolysis (lysing by DNase), disrupted plasma membrane, cell contents
digested by enzymes/may leak out, adjacent inflammation (cell bursts)

Coagulative necrosis - Answers• Ischaemic necrosis + gangrene in lower limbs

• Cells die but tissue architecture remains, maintains solid consistency

• Necrotic cells removed by inflammatory cells (neutrophils)

• Necrotic regions regenerate or replaced by scar (fibrosis)

,Liquefactive necrosis - Answers• Ischaemic necrosis in brain

• Due to massive infiltration by neutrophils to form an abscess → high ROS + protease activity

• Complete dissolution of necrotic tissue, cell architecture obliterated

Causeous necrosis - Answers• Associated with granulomatous inflammation of tuberculosis +
fungal infections

• Accumulation of amorphous/unstructured debris within an area of necrosis

• Tissue architecture lost + unrecognisable

Infarction - Answers• Area of ischaemic necrosis in tissue/organ

• Red/haemorrhagic: due to venous occlusion in loose/floppy tissue

• White: due to arterial occlusion in solid tissues

Apoptosis - Answers• Programmed cell-autonomous suicide, requires energy expenditure

• Occurs during development (limbs) + for removal of certain cells (self, infected)

• Gross morphological changes: cytoplasm shrinks without membrane rupture, plasma/nuclear
membrane blebs, cell contents in membrane bounded bodies (intact + phagocytosed), no
adjacent inflammation due to shrinkage + blebs

Apoptosis triggers - Answers• Lack of growth stimuli (growth factors)

• Death signals (TNF, Fas)

• DNA damage (p53 → DNA damage sensing factor) or unfolded protein response (causing ER
stress)

Intrinsic (mitochondrial) pathway of apoptosis - Answers• Internal cell injury results in apoptosis
of the cell

• Lack of GFs/protein misfolding/DNA damage → activation of sensors (BH3-only proteins) →
activation of BAX/BAK channel, cytochrome C leakage from mitochondria → activation of
caspase cascade → apoptosis

• BCL2 (anti-apoptotic protein) antagonises pro-apoptotic factors to oppose apoptosis →
abnormally high in acute myeloid leukemia patients → cells that should die do not

Extrinsic (death receptor) pathway - Answers• Receptor-ligand interactions induce cell death

, • Fas ligand located on cytotoxic T cell binds to Fas on target cell → receptor-ligand interaction
activates death receptor, initiating caspases through adaptor proteins → target
infected/tumour/damaged cells

ER stress (protein folding >> protein folding capacity) - Answers• Leads to decrease in anti-
apoptotic expression

• Unfolded protein response (cellular adaptation): ↓ protein synthesis + ↑ chaperone
production

• Can trigger autophagy: intrinsic breakdown of cellular organelles, regulated cell death

• Stress/starvation can result in autophagic vacuolisation within cell

• Outcomes: autophagic survival or autophagic cell death (depends on Beclin-1 levels)

Mitochondria - Answers• Low O2 → mitochondrial damage → low ATP, high ROS → necrosis

• More pro-apoptotic proteins (BH3-only), less anti-apoptotic proteins (BCL2) → leakage of
mitochondrial proteins (cytochrome C) → apoptosis

Tissue proliferative capacities - AnswersAbility of tissues to repair themselves is determined
partially by intrinsic proliferative capacity

Labile tissues - AnswersConstant proliferation to allow turnover, surface epithelia,
hematopoietic cells

Stable tissues - AnswersQuiescent, proliferation can be sporadically activated (e.g. by wound
healing), parenchyma of most solid organs (liver, kidney, pancreas), endothelial cells, fibroblasts,
smooth muscle cells

Permanent tissues - AnswersNo proliferation, injury irreversible, repair → scar formation, most
neurons + cardiac muscle cells

Healing mechanisms - Answers• Controlled by biochemical factors released in response to cell
injury, cell death or trauma

• Tightly regulates + induces resting cells entering the cell cycle

• Balance stimulatory + inhibitory factors → prevent over-proliferation

• Shorten cell cycle → faster cell division

• Decrease rate of cell loss → inhibit apoptosis
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