2.Cellular Adaptation Abbrent Cell Growth
2.Cellular Adaptation Abbrent Cell Growth
Presented by
Faustin Ntezimana
Learning Objective
Define Cellular adaptation.
Define Hypoxia, Atrophy, Hypertrophy,
Hyperplasia, Metaplasia and Dysplasia
Define Aberrant cell growth.
Define cancer and List the characteristics of cancer
cell.
Differentiate between benign and malignant
Tumors.
Nomenclature of benign and malignant Tumors.
Explore staging of tumor and grading.
Definition of Cellular adaptation
Types:
a) physiologic
b) pathologic
Causes:
a) increased functional demand
b) hormonal stimulation
Hyperplasia
is an increase in the number of cells in an organ or tissue
an adaptive response in cells capable of replication
a critical response of connective tissue cells in wound healing
Types:
a) physiologic hyperplasia
1) hormonal
ex. Proliferation of glandular epithelium of the female
breast at puberty & during pregnancy
2) compensatory – hyperplasia that occurs when a portion
of
a tissue is removed or diseased
e.g. partial resection of a liver > mitotic activity 12 hours
later
b) pathologic hyperplasia
Caused by excessive hormonal or growth factor
stimulation
Atrophy
Shrinkage in the size of the cell by the loss of cell substance
Results from decreased protein synthesis and increased
protein degradation in cells
Is accompanied in many situations by increased autophagy
with resulting increases in autophagic vacoules
Causes:
Decreased workload
Loss of innervation
Diminished blood supply
Inadequate nutrition
Loss of endocrine stimulation
Aging (senile atrophy)
Metaplasia
A reversible change in which one adult cell type ( epithelial
or mesenchymal) is replaced by another adult cell type.
Is cellular adaptation whereby cells sensitive to a
particular stress are replaced by other cell types better
able to withstand the adverse environment
Epithelial metaplasia
Examples
Squamous change that occurs in the respiratory epithelium
in habitual cigarette smokers ( normal columnar epithelial
cells of trachea & bronchi are replaced by stratified
squamous epithelial cells
Vitamin A deficiency
Chronic gastric reflux, the normal stratified squamos
epithelium of the lower esophagus may undergo metaplasia
to gastric columnar epithelium
Dysplasia:-
- Dysplasia refers to the appearance of cells that have
undergone some atypical changes in response to chronic
irritation.
- It is not a true adaptive process in that it serves no specific
functions.
- It is controlled reproduction of cells, but closely related to
malignancy in that it may transform into uncontrolled, rapid
reproduction.
- It is complete loss of normal architectural orientation of one
cell with the next both in shape and size.
- Epithelial cells are common sites for dysplastic changes.
E.g.: -Bronchial epithelium, Cervical epithelium, etc.
Case#1
A 4 year girl has a broken arm.
After her cast is removed 6 weeks later, her
healing arm is markedly smaller than her
normal arm.
Identify the type of adaptation and also
mention its mechanism.
Type of cellular adaptation:
Disuse Atrophy
Mechanism of adaptation:
Immobilization of muscle and decrease in the
flow of blood, than normal, will lead to shrinking
Case #2
2. Chemical Agents
a. glucose, salt or oxygen
b. poisons
c. environmental toxins
d. social “stimuli”
e. therapeutic drugs
3. Physical agents- trauma, extremes of temperature, radiation,
electric
shock, & sudden changes in atmospheric pressure
4. Infectious agents
5. Immunologic reactions
Example: anaphylactic reaction to a foreign protein or a drug
reaction to self antigens
6. Genetic defects
Examples are genetic malformations associated with Down
Syndrome,
sickle cell anemia & inborn errors of metabolism
7. Nutritional Imbalances
NECROSIS
Refers to a series of changes that accompany cell death,
largely resulting from the degradative action of enzymes on
lethally injured cells
The enzymes responsible for digestion of the cell are derived
either from the:
1) Lysosomes of the dying cells themselves or from
2) lysosomes of leukocytes that are recruited as
part of the inflammatory reaction to the dead cells
Patterns of Tissue Necrosis
1. Coagulative Necrosis
➢
A form of tissue necrosis in which the component cells are
dead but the basic tissue architecture is preserved for at
least several days
➢
It is characteristics of infarcts ( areas of ischemic
necrosis) in all solid organs except the brain
A wedge-shaped kidney
Infarct (yellow) with
preserva
tion of the outlines
2. Liquefactive Necrosis
➢
Seen in focal bacterial or occassionally fungal infections
because microbes stimulate the accumulation of
Inflammatory cells and the enzymes of leukocytes digest
( “liquefy”) the tissue
➢
This necrosis is characteristic of hypoxic death of cells
witnin the CNS
➢
Associated with suppurative inflammation (accumulation
of pus)
➢
The areas undergoing necrosis are transformed into a
Semi-solid consistency or state (liquid viscuous mass)
Example: abcess
Liquefactive necrosis. An infarct in the brain, showing
dissolution of tissue
3. Caseous Necrosis
➢
Encountered most often infoci of tuberculous infection
➢
Characterized by a cheesy yellow-white appearance of
the area of necrosis
➢
It is often enclosed within a distinctive inflammatory
border
Autophagy
Refers to lysosomal digestion of the cell's ow components
It is thought to be a survival mechanism in times of nutrient
deprivation
Organelles are enclosed in vacuoles that fuse with lysosomes
Cytoskeletal Abnormalities
some drugs & toxins interfere with the assembly & functions
of Cytoskeleton filaments or result in abnormal
accumulations of filaments
General Principles Relevant To Most Forms Of Cell Injury
➢
ATP depletion: failure of energy-dependent functions
reversible Injury necrosis
➢
Mitochondrial damage: ATP depletion failure of energy-
dependent cellular functions ultimately necrosis;
under some conditions, leakage of proteins that causes apoptosis
➢
Influx of calcium: activation of enzymes that damage cellular
components and may also trigger apoptosis
➢
Accumulation of reactive oxygen species: covalent modifications
of
cellular proteins, lipids, nucleic acids
➢
Increased permeability of cellular membranes: may affect plasma
membrane, lysosomal membranes, mitochondrial membranes;
typically culminates in necrosis
➢
Accumulations of damaged DNA and misfolded proteins triggers
apoptosis
APOPTOSIS (“FALLING OFF”)
➢
It is a pathway of cell death that is induced by a tightly
regulated suicide program in which cells destined to die
activate enzymes capable of degrading the cells own nuclear
DNA and nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins.
Involution of hormone- dependent tissues upon hormone
deprivation such as endometrial cell breakdown during the
menstrual cycle and regression of the lactating breast after
weaning.
Cell loss in proliferating cell populations, such as intestinal
epithelia
Causes of Apoptosis con’t
parenchymal cells
Most often seen in the liver but may also occur in the heart,
✔
✔
Result of defective catabolism and excessive intake
✔
Xanthomas are hypercholesterolemic tumurous masses
found in the connective tissue of the skin or tendons
Proteins
✔
Less common than lipid accumulations
✔
Occur because excess are presented to the cells or
because the cells synthesize excessive amounts
✔
Examples:
1) Nephrotic syndrome there is heavy protein leakage
across the glomerular filter due to a much larger
reabsorption of albumin
2) accumulation of newly synthesized imunoglobulins
in RER of some plasma cells forming rounded,
eosinophilic Russell bodies
3) Mallory body or “ alcoholic hyalin” is an eosinophilic
cytoplasmic inclusion in liver cells highly characteristic
of alcoholic liver disease
4) Neurofibrillary tangle found in the brain in Alzheimer
disease
Protein reabsorption droplets in the renal tubular epithelium
Glycogen
✔
Accumulations of these are associated with abnormalities
in the metabolism of either glucose or glycogen
✔
Ex.
1) In poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, glycogen
accumulates in renal tubular epithelium, cardiac
myocytes, and β cells of Islets of langerhans
2) Glycogen storage diseases or glycogeneses are
Genetic disorders where glycogen accumulates in
macrophages of patients with defects in lysosomal
enzymes
2) Melanin
✔
An endogenous, brown-black pigment synthesized
exclusively by melanocytes when the enzyme tyrosinase
catalyzes tyrosine to (DOPA) dihydroxyphenylalanine
located in the epidermis
✔
Acts as a screen against harmful ultraviolet radiation
✔
Basal keratinocytes in the skin can accumulate the
pigment (e.g. in freckles)
Melanin pigment in melanoma
3) Hemosiderin
✔
A hemoglobin-derived granular pigment that is
golden yellow to brown and accumulates in tissues
when there is a local or systemic excess of iron
✔
Iron is normally stored within cells in association with the
protein apoferritin, forming ferritin micelles
✔
Iron can be identified by the Prussian blue reaction
✔
Local excess of iron & consequently of hemosiderin result
from hemorrhage
Ex. Bruise
metastasis
The use of numerical subsets of the TNM
components indicates the progressive
extent of the malignant disease
Cont….
T (tumor) Cancer Staging
Tx Tumor cannot be adequately assessed
T0 No evidence of primary tumor
Tis Carcinoma in situ (E.g. ductal Ca of
breast)
T1—4 Progressive increase in tumor size or
involvement
N (nodes)
Nx Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed
N0 No evidence of regional node metastasis
N1—3 Increasing involvement of regional lymph
nodes
M (metastasis)
Mx Not assessed
M0 No distant metastasis
Adapted from Edge, S. B., Byrd, D. R., Compton, C. C., et al. (Eds.).(2010).
AJCC cancer staging manual (7th ed.). New York: Springer
Cancer "Grading"
"Grading is the pathologic classification of
tumor cells. Grading systems seek to define
the type of tissue from which the tumor
originated and the degree to which the
tumor cells retain the functional and
histologic characteristics of the tissue of
origin (differentiation)
Grade I : Well differentiated.
Grade II : Moderately differentiated.
Grade III : Poorly to very poorly differentiated
Grade IV : Very poorly differentiated.
Naming of benign & malignant
neoplasm
Tumors/neoplasm are named by adding the suffix-oma to
parenchymal tissue type from which the growth
originate.
E.g. benign tumor of glandular epithelial origin is
adenoma, of bone origin is osteoma.
Term carcinoma is used to designate a malignant tumor of
epithelial tissue origin. E.g. malignant tumor of
glandular epithelial origin is adenocarcinoma.
Malignant tumor of parenchymal origin is called
sarcomas (e.g. osteosarcoma)
Nomenclature
Benign Malignant
Epithelial Tumor
Surface Papilloma Squamous cell carcinoma
Glandular Adenoma Adenocarcinoma
Connective tissue
Fibrous Fibroma Fibro sarcoma
Adipose Lipoma Liposarcoma
Cartilage Chondroma Chondrosarcoma
Bone Osteoma Osteosarcoma
Blood vessels Hemangioma Hemangiosarcoma
Lymph Vessels Lymphangioma Lymphangiosarcoma
Muscle tumors
Smooth Leiomyoma Leiomyosarcoma
Striated Rhabdomyoma Rhabdomyosarcoma
Nerve Cell Tumors
Nerve cell Neuroma
Glial tissue Glioma
Hematologic tumors
Granulocytic Myelocytic leukemia
Erythrocytic Erythroleukemia
Plasma Cell Multiple Myeloma
Lymphoid Lymphocytic
leukemia
Causes of Cancer
Chemical agents such as tobacco smoke,
asbestos, & coal dust account for about 75% of
cancers
Physical and Environmental factors
Radiation
Exposure to irritants and pollutants
Exposure to sunlight
Viruses & bacteria
DNA viruses- Hepa B, Herpes, EBV,
CMV, Papilloma Virus
RNA Viruses- HIV,
Bacterium- H. pylor
Cont…
Genetic and family history
Colon cancer
Breast cancer
Dietary habits includes Low-Fiber,
High-fat, processed foods & alcohol
Carcinogenesis
Carcinogens cause mutations in cellular
DNA.
Malignant transformation, or
carcinogenesis, is thought to be at least
a three-step cellular process, involving:
Initiation,
Promotion
Progression
Carcinogenesis
Initiation
Mutation of genetic structure
Has potential to develop into clone of neoplastic
cells
Promotion
Characterized by the increased proliferation of
altered cells
Latent period
• Initial genetic alteration to clinical evidence of cancer
Progression
Characterized by increased growth rate of tumor
as well as its invasiveness and metastatic
Process of Cancer Development
Characteristics of Cancer Cells
Vary in size and shape
Aren’t encapsulated
Undergo abnormal mitosis
Function abnormally
Don’t resemble their cells of origin
Produce substances rarely associated
with the original cell or tissue
Can spread to other sites.
Signs & symptoms of cancer
Change in bowel/bladder function
Sores that do not heal
Unusual bleeding or discharge
Thickening or lump in breast or other
body parts
Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing
Recent change in a wart or mole
Nagging cough or hoarseness