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Death: Disaster or Design?

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Golden lads and girls all must, As chimney-sweepers, come to dust. - William Shakespeare, Cymbeline (Guiderius at IV, ii) Think not disdainfully of death, but look on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Death: Disaster or Design?


1
Golden lads and girls all must, As
chimney-sweepers, come to dust. - William
Shakespeare, Cymbeline (Guiderius at IV, ii)
Think not disdainfully of death, but look on it
with favor for even death is one of the things
that Nature wills. - Marcus Aurelius
Antoninus (121-180) Emperor of Rome
161180, distinguished Stoic philosopher
Meditations
2
Death Disaster or Design?
  • Necrosis versus Apoptosis

Dr Geoffrey Rowden Pathology Dept. Dalhousie
University geoffr_at_dal.ca
3
Outline
  • Cell damage and death - relationship to disease
  • Disastrous death Swelling (Oncosis) followed by
    necrosis (Since 1870 or so)
  • Planned cell death Apoptosis with or without
    necrosis (Since 1974 or so)

4
Rudolf Virchow (1821-1902)
All diseases are traceable to alterations in
cells
5
Cells response to Stress
  • Adapt and live on at a lower or higher state of
    activity
  • Fail to cope with the stress and die

6
Traditional cell death
  • Cells swell because they lose the ability to
    maintain salt balances across their membranes
    pump failure
  • Mostly due to shutdown of energy generation by
    Mitochondria
  • Termed Necrosis but should be called Oncosis

7
Morphology of Swelling Death(Oncosis)
8
Post-Oncosis Coagulative Necrosis
  • Commonest form
  • Main causes - Ischemia (no blood flow)/hypoxia
    (no oxygenation)
  • Protein denaturation with little initial enzyme
    activation - Lack of water
  • Cell outlines initially preserved
  • Eosinophilic (Pink stained) cytoplasm
  • EXAMPLE Myocardial infarct

9
Gross pathology Myocardial Infarct
10
Lesions in coronary arteries
11
Critical Lesion - Atheroma Histology
12
Normal - Dead cardiomyocytes
13
Oncosis (Accidental Cell Death)
  • Accidental death is typified by cell swelling
    due to energy depletion and ion pump failure.
    Necrosis is the post mortem result.
  • Release of cell contents provokes an inflammatory
    response. Not seen in apoptosis.

14
Apoptosis
  • First described in 1974 John Kerr
  • Programmed cell death
  • Other names Necrobiosis, Shrinkage necrosis,
    Single cell deletion.
  • Counterbalance to mitosis.

15
Apoptosis A helpful illustration of the term
16
Oncosis Versus Apoptosis
  • Apoptosis is the default disposal system to
    delete cells that have accumulated unrepairable
    DNA damage. Genomic integrity is protected . May
    have arisen in response to viral attack on cells.
  • Stereotyped morphologic pattern.
  • Linkage to DNA repair systems like p53 (Guardian
    of the genome).

17
Apoptosis - Morphology
18
Morphology of Swelling Death(Oncosis)
19
Role in Tissue Homeostasis
  • Predictable developmental remodeling. e.g.
    tadpole tail, digits, soft palate kidney
    remodelling, brain development, etc.
  • Adult remodeling e.g.cyclical proliferation/atrop
    hy as in the endometrium, breast or hair
    follicles.
  • Gene regulated.

20
Apoptosis - Neural Development
Surplus neurons deleted
21
Hormone Deprivation -Prostate
22
DNA Ladders
DNA is chopped up in a controlled manner
23
Genes of Cell Death
  • Caenorhabditis elegans (a nematode) deletes 131
    cells by apoptosis during the development from
    egg to adult.
  • Mutations identify genes (ced 3/4 ) as
    necessary for cell death. (pro-apoptotic).
  • Ced 9 gene is anti-apoptotic and Bcl-2 is the
    mammalian homologue.

24
Poison Cupboard of Caspases
  • The enzymes that do the controlled chopping
  • Cysteine proteases with preference for cleavage
    at an aspartate residue.
  • Activation of pro-caspases e.g. caspase 8
  • Cascade of caspase activation. e.g. c10, c3,
    c7, c6, c2.

25
Summary
26
Must not all things at the last be swallowed up
in death? Plato (427 BC - 347 BC), Dialogues,
Phaed
27
Phagocytic Disposal
28
Mitochondria An important target
29
Bcl-2 Family
  • Anti-apoptotic - Bcl-2 , - mostly membrane
    associated, especially on mitochondrial outer
    membranes.
  • Pro-apoptotic - Bax, - cytoplasmic. Form
    competitive links to dimerize with Bcl-2.
    Inactivate the protective functions.

30
Bcl-2/Bax and Cancer
How the balance shifts to cause more or less
cells surviving
31
Summary
32
Recap
  • Cell damage and death - relationship to disease
  • Disastrous death Swelling (Oncosis) followed by
    necrosis
  • Planned cell death Apoptosis with or without
    necrosis

33
For three days after death hair and fingernails
continue to grow but phone calls taper
off. Johnny Carson
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