7. Cell Adaptations Flashcards

1
Q

What does the size of cell populations depend on?

A

Rate of cell proliferation, cell differentiation, and cell death by apoptosis.

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2
Q

What regulates normal cell proliferation?

A

Proto-oncogenes.

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3
Q

What are the final outcomes of cellular adaptations?

A

Survive - resist apoptosis.
Divide - enter cell cycle.
Differentiate - take on specialised form and function.
Die - undergo apoptosis.

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4
Q

What forms of cell to cell signalling are there?

A

Hormones, local mediators, and direct cell-cell or cell-stroma contact.

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5
Q

What are growth factors involved in?

A

Cell proliferation.

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6
Q

How do growth factors regulate cells entering the cell cycle?

A

Bind to specific receptors, stimulate transcription of genes that regulate entry of cell into cell cycle.

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7
Q

What do growth factors affect?

A

Cell proliferation and inhibition, locomotion, contractility, differentiation, viability, activation, angiogenesis.

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8
Q

What are four types of important growth factors?

A

EGF - epidermal growth factor.
VEGF - vascular endothelial growth factor.
PDGF - platelet derived growth factor.
GCSF - granulocyte colony-stimulating factor.

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9
Q

How is growth in the cell cycle increased?

A

Shortening the cell cycle, conversion of quiescent cells to proliferating cells by making them enter the cell cycle.

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10
Q

What happens in each of the steps of the cell cycle?

A

G1 - gap 1, presynthetic, cell grows.
S - DNA synthesis.
G2 - gap 2, premitotic, cell prepares to divide.
M - mitosis.

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11
Q

What is the most critical checkpoint of the cell cycle?

A

R (restriction) point towards the end of G1. Most commonly altered in cancer cells.

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12
Q

What controls the cell cycle?

A

Cyclins and CDKs.

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13
Q

What are labile cell populations?

A

Stem cells divide persistently to replenish losses.

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14
Q

What are stable cell populations?

A

Stem cells normally quiescent or proliferate very slowly, but proliferate persistently when required.

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15
Q

What are permanent cell populations?

A

Stem cells present, but cannot mount an effective proliferative response to significant cell loss.

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16
Q

What are the five types of cell adaptation?

A

Regeneration - cells multiply to replace losses.
Hyperplasia - cells increase in number above normal.
Hypertrophy - cells increase in size.
Atrophy - cells become smaller.
Metaplasia - cells are replaced by cells of a different type.

17
Q

What will the result of a harmful agent be if it is removed, there is limited tissue damage, and regeneration?

A

Resolution.

18
Q

What will the result of a harmful agent be if it persists, there is extensive tissue damage, and permanent cells?

A

Scar.

19
Q

How many times can human cells regenerate?

A

61.3

20
Q

What is reconstitution?

A

Replacement of a lost part of the body.

21
Q

Which cell populations does hyperplasia happen in?

A

Labile or stable cell populations.

22
Q

Which cell population does hypertrophy happen in?

A

Permanent cells.

23
Q

What are some physiological examples of hyperplasia?

A

Proliferation of endometrium under the influence of oestrogen. Bone marrow producing erythrocytes in response to hypoxia.

24
Q

What are some pathological examples of hyperplasia?

A

Eczema, thyroid goitre in iodine deficiency.

25
Q

What are some physiological examples of hypertrophy?

A

Skeletal muscles and pregnant uterus (hypertrophy and hyperplasia).

26
Q

What are some pathological examples of hypertrophy?

A

Right ventricular hypertrophy.

27
Q

What are some physiological examples of atrophy?

A

Ovarian atrophy in post menopausal women.

28
Q

What are some pathological examples of atrophy?

A

Atrophy of disuse - muscle atrophy.
Denervation atrophy - wasted hand muscles after median nerve damage.
Inadequate blood supply - thinning of skin on legs with peripheral vascular disease.
Inadequate nutrition - wasting of muscles with malnutrition.
Loss of endocrine stimuli - breast.
Persistent injury - polymyositis.
Senile atrophy - brain, heart.
Pressure - tissues around an enlarging benign tumour.

29
Q

What example of metaplasia does smoking cause?

A

Bronchial pseudostratified ciliated epithelium to stratified squamous epithelium in the respiratory system.

30
Q

What example of metaplasia does acid reflux, Barrett’s oesophagus, cause?

A

Stratified squamous epithelium to gastric glandular epithelium.

31
Q

What is hypoplasia?

A

Underdevelopment or incomplete development of a tissue or organ at the embryonic stage, inadequate number of cells.

32
Q

What is aplasia?

A

Complete failure of a specific tissue or organ to develop, an embryonic developmental disorder.

33
Q

What is involution?

A

Overlaps with atrophy, normal programmed shrinkage of an organ - like uterus after childbirth.