01 Cell Injury PDF
01 Cell Injury PDF
01 Cell Injury PDF
ETIOLOGY or CAUSE
Two Major Classes of Etiologic Agents
1. Genetic
2. Acquired
PATHOGENESIS
Sequence of events in the response of cells or tissues to the
The Adaptive Response may consist of:
etiologic agent, from the initial stimulus to the ultimate
1. Hypertrophy – increase in the size of cells and functional
expression of the disease
activity
One of the main domains of pathology
2. Hyperplasia – increase in the number of cells
3. Atrophy – decrease in the size and metabolic activity of cells
MOLECULAR and MORPHOLOGIC CHANGES
4. Metaplasia – change in the phenotype of cells
Structural alterations in cells or tissues that are either
characteristics of a disease or diagnostic of an etiologic agent
CELLULAR RESPONSES TO INJURY
Nature of Injurious Stimuli Cellular Response
FUNCTIONAL DERANGEMENTS and CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
End result of genetic, biochemical, and structural changes in cells ALTERED Physiological Stimuli;
Cellular Adaptations
and tissues are functional abnormalities, which lead to the Some Nonlethal Injurious Stimuli
clinical manifestations (signs and symptoms) of disease, as well as Increased demand, increased
Hyperplasia, hypertrophy
its progress (clinical course and outcome) stimulation
Decreased nutrients, decreased
Atrophy
Rudolf Virchow – father of Modern Pathology stimulation
Study of the causes, mechanisms, and morphologic and Chronic irritation (physical or
Metaplasia
biochemical correlates of cell injury chemical)
Injury to cells and to extracellular matrix ultimately leads to tissue Reduced Oxygen Supply: Chemical
Cellular Injury
and organ injury determine the morphologic and clinical Injury; Microbial Infection
patterns of disease Acute reversible injury
Acute and transient
Cellular swelling fatty change
OVERVIEW: CELLULAR RESPONSES to STRESS and NOXIOUS STIMULI Irreversible injury cell death
The normal cell is confined to a fairly narrow range of function Progressive and severe (including
Necrosis
and structure by its: DNA damage)
Apoptosis
a. State of metabolism, differentiation, and specialization Metabolic alterations, Genetic or Intracellular accumulations;
b. Constraints of neighboring cells Acquired; Chronic Injury Calcification
c. Availability of metabolic substrates Cumulative Sublethal Injury over
Homeostasis – steady state long life span
Cellular aging
Adaptations – reversible functional and structural responses to
more severe physiologic stresses and some pathologic stimuli,
Cell injury – if the limits of adaptive responses are exceeded or if Increased workload – most common stimulus for hypertrophy of
cells are exposed to injurious agents or stress, deprived of muscle muscle cells synthesize more proteins and the number
essential nutrients, or become compromised by mutations that of myofilaments increases increases the amount of force each
affect essential cellular constituents myocyte can generate increases the strength and work
Reversible up to a certain point capacity of the muscles
Irreversible injury – stimulus persists or is severe enough Physiologic growth of the uterus during pregnancy as a hormone-
from the beginning induced increase in the size of an organ
Cell death
Mechanisms of Hypertrophy
Hypertrophy is the result of increased production of cellular
proteins
Can be induced by the linked actions of:
a. Mechanical sensors (triggered by increased work load)
b. Growth factors (including TGF-β, insulin-like growth factor-1
[IGF-1], fibroblast growth factor)
The relationship between normal, adapted, reversibly injured, and
c. Vasoactive agents (α-adrenergic agonist, endothelin-1,
dead myocardial cells
angiotension II)
Cell death – end result of progressive cell injury
Two main biochemical pathways involved in muscle hypertrophy
One of the most crucial events in the evolution of disease in
a. Phosphoinositide 3-kinase / Akt pathway (more important in
any tissue or organ
Results from diverse causes: physiologic hypertrophy)
b. Signaling downstream of G-protein-coupled receptors (more
a. Ischemia (reduced blood flow)
important in pathologic hypertrophy)
b. Infections
c. Toxins Hypertrophy – may also be associated with a switch of contractile
Normal and essential process of embryogenesis, the proteins from adult to fetal or neonatal forms
development of organs, and the maintenance of homeostasis a. α isoform of myosin heavy chain replaced by slower, more
Two principal pathway of Cell Death energetically economical contraction of β isoform
a. Necrosis b. Atrial Natriuretic Factor (ANF) – peptide hormone that
b. Apoptosis causes salt secretion by the kidney decreases blood
Autophagy – an adaptive cellular response triggered by volume and pressure reduce hemodynamic load
nutrient deprivation; may also culminate in cell death
Metabolic derangements in cells and sublethal, chronic injury may
be associated with intracellular accumulations of a number of
substances, including proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates
Calcium – often deposited at sites of cell death pathologic
calcification
Aging – accompanied by characteristic morphologic and
functional changes in cells
HYPERTROPHY
Refers to an increase in the size of cells, resulting in an increase in
the size of the organ
Has NO NEW cells, just larger cells
Due to the synthesis of more structural components of the cells
Nondividing cells increase tissue mass by hypertrophy
Biochemical Mechanisms of Myocardial Hypertrophy
Selective hypertrophy – subcellular organelle’s hypertrophy Loss of Innervation (Denervation atrophy) normal metabolism
Barbiturates hypertrophy of the smooth endoplasmic and function of skeletal muscle are dependent on its nerve supply
reticulum (SER) in hepatocytes increases the amount of Diminished blood supply a decrease in blood supply (ischemia)
enzymes (cytochrome P450 mixed function oxidases) to a tissue as a result of slowly developing arterial occlusive
detoxify the drugs disease results in atrophy of the tissue
Senile atrophy – progressive atrophy of the brain because of
HYPERPLASIA reduced blood supply as a result of atherosclerosis
An increase in the number of cells in an organ or tissue, usually Inadequate nutrition – profound protein-calorie malnutrition
resulting in increased mass of the organ or tissue (marasmus) is associated with the use of skeletal muscle as a
Can occur together with hypertrophy and may be triggered by the source of energy after other reserves such as adipose stores have
same external stimulus been depleted
Takes place if the cell population is capable of dividing Cachexia – marked muscle wasting; also seen in patients
increasing the number of cells with chronic inflammatory diseases and cancer
Loss of endocrine stimulation – many hormone – responsive
A. Physiologic Hyperplasia tissues are dependent on endocrine stimulation for normal
1. Hormonal hyperplasia metabolism and function
Increases the functional capacity of a tissue when needed Pressure – tissue compression for any length of time can cause
E.g. proliferation of the glandular epithelium of the female atrophy
breast at puberty and during pregnancy, usually accompanied Result of ischemic changes caused by compromise of the
by enlargement (hypertrophy) of the glandular epithelial cells blood supply by the pressure exerted by the expanding mass
2. Compensatory hyperplasia
Increases tissue mass after damage or partial resection
B. Pathologic Hyperplasia
Caused by excesses of hormones or growth factors acting on
target cells
E.g. endometrial hyperplasia as an abnormal hormone-induced
hyperplasia brought about by absolute or relative increase in the
amount of estrogen hyperplasia of the endometrial glands
E.g. benign prostatic hyperplasia – hyperplasia in response to
androgens
Hyperplasia is distinct from cancer, but pathologic hyperplasia
constitutes a fertile soil in which cancerous proliferation may
eventually arise
A characteristic response to certain viral infection, such as
papillomaviruses, which causes skin warts and several mucosal A. Normal brain of a young adult. B. Atrophy of the brain in an 82
lesions composed of masses of hyperplastic epithelium year old male with atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease,
resulting in reduced blood supply. Note that loss of brain
Mechanisms of Hyperplasia substance narrows the gyri and widens the sulci. The meninges
Result of growth factor-driven proliferation of mature cells and, in have been stripped from the right half of each specimen to reveal
some cases, by increased output of new cells from tissue stem the surface of the brain
cells
Initial response: Decrease in cell size and organelles reduce the
ATROPHY metabolic needs of the cell sufficiently to permit its survival
Reduced size of an organ or tissue resulting from a decrease in Atrophic muscle contains FEWER Mitochondria and myofilaments
cell size and number and a REDUCED amount of Rough ER
A. Physiologic atrophy Early in the process atrophic cells may have diminished function,
Common during normal development but they are not dead
E.g. Notochord and thyroglossal duct, undergo atrophy during
fetal development Mechanisms of Atrophy
E.g. Uterus decreases in size after parturition Atrophy results from decreased protein synthesis and increased
protein degradation in cells
B. Pathologic atrophy Reduced metabolic activity decrease protein synthesis
Depends on the underlying cause and can be local or generalized nutrient deficiency and disuse ubiquitin ligases (UBIQUITIN –
PROTEASOME PATHWAY) attach the small peptide ubiquitin to
Common Causes of Atrophy cellular proteins and target these proteins for degradation in
Decreased workload (atrophy of disuse) initial decrease in cell proteasomes
size is reversible once activity is resumed Also responsible for the accelerated proteolysis seen in a
With more prolonged disuse, skeletal muscle fibers decrease variety of catabolic conditions including cancer cachexia
in number as well as in size
Autophagy – also accompanied in atrophy Differentiation of stem cells generated by cytokines, growth
Increases the number of autophagic vacuoles factors, and extracellular matrix components in the cell’s
“self-eating”; the process in which the starved cell eats its environment
own components in an attempt to find nutrients and survive
Autophagic vacuoles – membrane bound vacuoles that OVERVIEW of CELL INJURY and CELL DEATH
contain fragments of cell components Cell injury results when cells are stressed so severely that they are
no longer able to adapt or when cells are exposed to inherently
METAPLASIA damaging agents or suffer from intrinsic abnormalities
A reversible change in which one differentiated cell type a. Reversible cell injury – in early stages or mild forms of injury, the
(epithelial or mesenchymal) is replaced by another cell type functional and morphologic changes are REVERSIBLE if the
May represent an adaptive substitution of cells that are sensitive damaging stimulus is removed
to stress by cell types better able to withstand the adverse HALLMARKS of Reversible Injury
environment 1. Reduced oxidative phosphorylation with resultant
Columnar to squamous – most common epithelial metaplasia depletion of energy stores in the form of ATP
Occurs in the respiratory tract in response to chronic 2. Cellular swelling caused by changes in ion
irritation concentrations and water influx
Stones in the excretory ducts of the salivary glands, pancreas, 3. Intracellular organelles, mitochondria and the
or bile ducts may also cause replacement of the normal cytoskeleton show alterations
secretory columnar epithelium by stratified squamous b. Cell death – with continuing damage the injury becomes
epithelium irreversible cannot recover dies
The influences that predispose to metaplasia, if persistent, may 1. Necrosis – damage to membranes is severe, lysosomal
initiate malignant transformation in metaplasmnic epithelium enzymes enter the cytoplasm digest the cell cellular
contents leak out
ALWAYS a pathologic process
2. Apoptosis – cell’s DNA or proteins are damaged beyond
repair
Form of cell death that is characterized by nuclear
dissolution, fragmentation of the cell without complete
loss of membrane integrity, and rapid removal of the
cellular debris
Serves many normal functions and is not necessarily
associated with cell injury
MORPHOLOGIC ALTERATIONS IN CELL INJURY Schematic illustration of the morphologic changes in cell injury
culminating in necrosis or apoptosis
FAT NECROSIS
Focal areas of fat destruction, resulting from release of activated
LIQUEFACTIVE NECROSIS pancreatic lipases into the substance of the pancreas and the
Characterized by digestion of the dead cells transformation of peritoneal cavity
the tissue into a liquid viscous mass Occurs in the calamitous abdominal emergency ACUTE
Seen in focal bacteria, or occasionally, fungal infections PANCREATITIS pancreatic enzymes leak out of acinar cells and
microbes stimulate the accumulation of leukocytes and the liquefy the membranes of fat cells in the peritoneum
liberation of enzymes from these cells Released lipases split the triglyceride esters contained within fat
PUS – creamy yellow appearance of the necrotic material due to cells fatty acids combine with calcium to produce grossly
dead leukocytes visible chalky-white areas (fat saponification) enable the
Ex: hypoxic death cells within the CNS surgeon and the pathologist to identify the lesions
FIBRINOID NECROSIS
GANGRENOUS NECROSIS
Special form of necrosis usually seen in immune reactions
Not a specific pattern of cell death
involving blood vessels
Applied to a limb, generally the lower leg, that has lost its blood
Occurs when complexes of antigens and antibodies are deposited
supply and has undergone necrosis (coagulative necrosis)
in the walls of arteries
involving multiple tissue planes
Deposits of these “immune complexes” together with fibrin that
When bacterial infection is superimposed there is more
has leaked out of vessels bright pink and amorphous
liquefactive necrosis actions of degradative enzymes in the
appearance in H&E stains FIBRINOID
bacteria and the attracted leukocytes WET GANGRENE
Ex: immunologically mediated vasculitis syndromes
CASEOUS NECROSIS
Encountered most often in foci of tuberculous infection
“Caseous” – cheeselike is derived from the friable white
appearance of the area of necrosis
Collection of fragmented or lysed cells and amorphous granular
debris enclosed within a distinctive inflammatory border
GRANULOMA – characteristic of a focus of inflammation
Dystrophic calcification – if necrotic cells and cellular debris are glycolysis glycogen stores are rapidly depleted
not promptly destroyed and reabsorbed, they tend to attract accumulation of LACTIC acid and inorganic phosphates from
calcium salts and other minerals and to become calcified hydrolysis of phosphate esters reduce intracellular pH
decreased activity of many cellular enzymes
2+ 2+
MECHANISMS of CELL INJURY c. Failure of the Ca pump influx of Ca damaging effects on
1. The cellular response to injurious stimuli depends on the nature numerous cellular component
of the injury, its duration, and its severity d. With prolonged or worsening depletion of ATP, structural
2. The consequences of cell injury depend on the type, state, and disruption of the protein synthetic apparatus occurs
adaptability of the injured cell detachment of ribosomes from the rough ER and dissociation of
Cell’s nutritional and hormonal status and its metabolic polysomes reduction in protein synthesis
needs e. In cells deprived of oxygen or glucose, proteins may become
Genetic variations misfolded trigger a cellular reaction (UNFOLDED PROTEIN
3. Cell injury results from different biochemical mechanisms acting RESPONSE) culminates in cell injury and even death
on several essential cellular components f. Irreversible damage to mitochondrial and lysosomal membranes
Cellular components that are most frequently damaged by NECROSIS
injurious stimuli include:
a. Mitochondria
b. Cell membranes
c. Machinery of protein synthesis and packaging
d. DNA in nuclei
4. Any injurious stimuli may simultaneously trigger multiple
interconnected mechanisms that damage cells
DEPLETION of ATP
ATP Depletion and Decreased ATP synthesis are frequently
Functional and morphologic consequences of decreased
associated with both hypoxic and chemical (toxic) injury
intracellular ATP during cell injury
Two Ways ATP is Produced: Morphologic changes are indicative of reversible cell injury
1. Oxidative phosphorylation of adenosine diphosphate – major Further depletion of ATP results in cell death, typically by necrosis
pathway; reaction that results in reduction of oxygen by the
electron transfer system of mitochondria MITOCHONDRIAL DAMAGE
2. Glycolitic pathway – can generate ATP in the absence of oxygen Mitochondria – cell’s suppliers of life-sustaining energy in the
using glucose derived either from body fluids or from the
form of ATP
hydrolysis of glycogen
Are also critical players in cell injury and death
Major Causes of ATP Depletion Can be damaged by:
1. Reduced supply of oxygen and nutrients a. Iincreases of cytosolic Ca
2+
2. Mitochondrial damage b. Reactive oxygen species
3. Actions of some toxins (cyanide) c. Oxygen deprivation
d. All types of injurious stimuli (hypoxia and toxins)
Depletion of ATP to 5% to 10% of normal levels has widespread Two Major Consequences of Mitochondrial Damage
effects on many critical cellular systems 1. Mitochondrial damage often results in the formation of a high-
a. The activity of the plasma membrane energy-dependent sodium conductance channel in the mitochondrial membrane
+ +
pump (ouabain-sensitive Na K ATPase) is reduced sodium (MITOCHONDRIAL PERMEABILITY TRANSITION PORE)
enters and accumulates inside cells and potassium diffuse out
Opening of the conductance channel loss of mitochondrial
CELL SWELLING dilation of the ER
membrane potential failure of oxidative phosphorylation
b. Cellular energy metabolism is altered
and progressive depletion of ATP necrosis of the cell
Supply of oxygen to cells is reduced Ischemia oxidative
Cyclophilin D – a protein structural component of the
phosphorylation ceases decrease in cellular ATP and
mitochondrial permeability transition pore target of the
increase AMP stimulate phosphofructokinase and
immunosuppressive drug cyclosporin
phosphorylase activities increased rate of ANAEROBIC
2. The mitochondria also sequester between their outer and inner 3. Increased intracellular Ca2+ levels also result in the induction of
membranes several proteins that are capable of activating apoptosis by:
apoptotic pathways; cytochrome c and proteins that indirectly a. Direct activation of caspases
activate apoptosis inducing enzymes (CASPASES) b. Increasing mitochondrial permeability
Increased permeability of the outer mitochondrial
membrane leakage of proteins into the cytosol death
by apoptosis
3. Protein misfolding
Chaperones in the ER – control the proper folding of newly
synthesized protein
Misfolded polypeptides are ubiquitinated and targeted for
proteolysis in proteasomes
Unfolded Protein Response – unfolded or misfolded proteins that
accumulate in the ER
a. Activates signaling pathways that increase the production of
chaperones
b. Enhance proteosomal degradation of abnormal proteins
c. Slow protein translation reducing the load of misfolded
proteins in the cell
Execution Phase of Apoptosis ER Stress – if the cytoprotective response is unable to cope with
The two initiating pathways converge to a cascade of caspase the accumulation of misfolded proteins cell activates caspases
activation mediates the final phase of apoptosis and induces apoptosis
Mitochondrial pathway leads to activation of the initiator caspase-
9, and the death receptor pathway to the initiators caspase-8 and
-10
Executioner caspases (caspase 3, and -6) – act on many cellular
components
a. Cleave an inhibitor of a cytoplasmic DNase make the
DNase enzymatically active
b. Induces the characteristic cleavage of DNA into nucleosome-
sized pieces
c. Degrade structural components of the nuclear matrix
promote fragmentation of nuclei
INTRACELLULAR ACCUMULATIONS Free fatty acids from adipose tissue or ingested food
1. Normal cellular constituent – water, lipids, proteins, and transported into hepatocytes esterified to triglycerides
carbohydrates accumulates in excess coverted into cholesterol or phospholipids or oxidized to ketone
2. Abnormal substance bodies and some are synthesized from acetate as well
a. Exogenous – mineral or products of infectious agents Release of triglycerides from the hepatocytes requires association
b. Endogenous – product of abnormal synthesis or metabolism with apoproteins to form lipoproteins transported from the
blood into the tissues
Four Types of Abnormalities in Intracellular Accumulations Excess accumulation of triglycerides within the liver may result
1. Normal endogenous substance is from excessive entry or defective metabolism and export of lipids
produced at a normal or increased Alcohol – hapatotoxin, alters mitochondrial and microsomal
rate, but the rate of metabolism is functions increased synthesis and reduced breakdown of lipids
inadequate to remove it CCl4 and protein malnutrition – cause fatty change by reducing
fatty change in liver synthesis of apoproteins
reabsorption proteins droplets in Hypoxia – inhibits fatty acid oxidation
the tubules of the kidneys Starvation – increases fatty acid mobilization from peripheral
2. An abnormal endogenous stores
substance, typically the product of
a mutated gene, accumulates
because of defects in protein
folding and transport and an
inability to degrade the abnormal
protein efficiently
Accumulation of mutated α-1 anti-
trypsin in the liver cells
Mutated proteins in degenerative
disorders of the CNS
3. A normal endogenous substance
accumulates because of defects,
usually inherited, in enzymes that
are required for the metabolism of
the substance
Morphology Amyloidosis – abnormal proteins deposit in extracellular spaces
Fatty change – often seen in the liver and heart 1. Reabsorption droplets in proximal renal tubules – seen in renal
Appears as clear vacuoles within parenchymal cells diseases associated with protein loss in the urine (proteinuria)
Intracellular accumulations of water or polysaccharides may also Proteins appear as pink hyaline droplets within the cytoplasm of
produce clear vacuoles the tubular cell
a. Liver Reversible process; proteinuria diminishes protein droplets are
Mild fatty change may not affect the gross appearance metabolized and disappear
Progressive accumulation, organ enlarges becomes
increasingly yellow may weigh two to four times normal
bright yellow, soft, greasy organ
Fatty change begins with the development of minute,
membrane-bound inclusions (liposome) closely applied to
the ER small vacuoles in the cytoplasm around the nucleus
vacuoles coalesce cleared spaces that displace the
nucleus to the periphery of the cell FATTY CYSTS
b. Heart
Lipid in the form of small droplets
1. Prolonged moderate hypoxia profound anemia
intracellular deposits of fat bands of yellowed
myocardium alternating with bands of darker, red-
brown, uninvolved myocardium (TIGERED EFFECT)
2. Produced by profound hypoxia or by some forms of 2. The proteins that accumulate may be normal secreted proteins
myocarditis uniformly affected myocytes that are produced in excessive amounts, as occurs in certain
plasma cells engaged in active synthesis of immunoglobulins
Cholesterol and Cholesterol Esters ER becomes hugely distended large, homogenous
1. Atherosclerosis – smooth muscle cells and macrophages within eosinophilic inclusions RUSSELL BODIES
the intimal layer of the aorta and large arteries are filled with lipid 3. Defective intracellular transport and secretion of critical proteins
vacuoles α1-antitrypsin deficiency – mutations in the protein
Have a foamy appearance (foam cells) significantly slow folding build up of partially folded
Yellow cholesterol – laden atheromas in the intima intermediates aggregate in the ER of the liver and not
May rupture releasing lipids into the extracellular space secreted deficiency of the circulating enzyme
2. Xanthomas – intracellular accumulation of cholesterol within EMPHYSEMA
MACROPHAGES 4. Accumulation of cytoskeletal proteins
Clusters of foamy cells that are found in the subepithelial a. Microtubules – 20 – 25 nm in diameter
connective tissue of the skin and in tendons producing b. Thin actin filaments – 6 – 8 nm
timorous masses c. Thick myosin filaments – 25 nm
3. Cholesterolosis – focal accumulations of cholesterol – laden d. Intermediate filaments – 10 nm
macrophages in the lamina propria of the gallbladder Provide a flexible intracellular scaffold that organizes the
cytoplasm and resists forces applied to the cell
1. Keratin filaments (epithelial cells) associated with
2. Neurofilaments (neurons) cell injury
3. Desmin filaments (muscle cells)
4. Vimentin filaments (connective tissue cells)
5. Glial filaments (astrocytes)
Alcoholic hyaline – eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusion in liver
cells that is characteristic of alcohol liver disease, composed
of predominantly keratin intermediate filaments
Neurofibrillary tangle – found in the brain of Alzheimer
disease contains neurofilaments and other proteins
5. Aggregation of abnormal proteins – may deposit in tissues and
interfere with normal functions
Deposits can be intracellular, extracellular, or both
4. Niemann-Pick disease, Type C – lysosomal storage disease caused Aggregates may be either directly or indirectly cause the
by mutations affecting an enzyme involved in cholesterol pathologic changes
trafficking cholesterol accumulation in multiple organs Amyloidosis – a.k.a proteinopathies or protein-aggregation
diseases
PROTEINS
Intracellular accumulations appear as rounded, eosinophilic HYALINE CHANGE
droplets, vacuoles, or aggregates in the cytoplasm Alteration within cells or in the extracellular space that gives a
Can be amorphous, fibrillar, or crystalline in appearance in homogenous, glassy, pink appearance in routine histologic
electron microscope sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin
Produced by a variety of alterations and does not represent a Melanin – derived from the Greek (melas – black)
specific pattern of accumulation An endogenous, non-hemoglobin derived, brown-black
1. Extracellular Hyaline - collagenous fibrous tissue in old scars may pigment formed when the enzyme tyrosinase catalyzes the
appear hyalinized oxidation of tyrosine to dihydroxyphenylalanine in melanocytes
HPN and DM walls of arterioles (kidneys) become Only endogenous brown-black pigment
hyalinized from extravasated plasma protein and Homogentisic acid – a black pigment that occurs with
deposition of basement membrane material alkaptonuria pigment is deposited in the skin, connective
tissue, and cartilage OCHRONOSIS
GLYCOGEN Hemosiderin – hemoglobin – derived, golden yellow-to-brown,
Readily available energy source stored in the cytoplasm of healthy granular or crystalline pigment that serves as one of the major
cells storage forms of iron
Excessive intracellular deposits of glycogen are seen in patients Transferrins – transport proteins that carries iron
with an abnormality in either glucose or glycogen metabolism Apoferritin – storage form in the cells with proteins
Appear as clear vacuoles within the cytoplasm Ferritin – forms hemosiderin granules
Dissolves in aqueous fixatives Seen in the mononuclear phagocytes of the bone marrow,
Diabetes mellitus – prime example of glucose metabolism spleen, and liver engaged in red cell breakdown
disorder
Glycogen found in renal tubular epithelial cells, β cells of the
islets of Langerhans, and heart muscle cells
Glycogen storage diseases or glycogenoses – genetic disorders of
glycogen accumulations within the cells
PIGMENTS
Colored substances
A. Exogenous Pigments
Coming from outside the body
1. Carbon (coal dust) – most common exogenous pigment, an
ubiquitous pollutant of urban life
Local or systemic excesses of iron cause hemosiderin to
Inhaled picked up by macrophages within the alveoli
accumulate within cells
transported through lymphatic channels to the regional
BRUISE: Extravasated red cells at the site of injury are
lymph nodes in the tracheobronchial region accumulation
phagoctosed over several days by macrophages break dwon
blacken the tissues of the lungs (anthracosis)
hemoglobin and recover the iron
Coal Worker’s Pneumoconiosis – serious lung disease of coal
Removal of the iron heme moiety is converted to biliverdin
miners where aggregates of carbon dust may induce
fibroblastic reaction or even emphysema (“green bile”) bilirubin (“red bile”)
Tattooing – form of localized, exogenous pigmentation of the Iron released from heme incorporated to ferritin
skin. Pigments inoculated are phagocytosed by dermal hemosiderin
macrophages reside for the remainder of the life of the Red-blue green-blue golden yellow resolved
embellished Systemic overload of iron hemosiderin may be deposited in
B. Endogenous Pigments many organs and tissues HEMOSIDEROSIS
Synthesize within the body itself
Lipofuscin – insoluble pigment Causes of Hemosiderosis
1. Increased absorption of dietary iron
Also known as lipochrome or wear-and-teat pigment
2. Hemolytic anemias abnormal quantities of iron are released
Composed of polymers of lipids and phospholipids in complex
from erythrocytes
with protein derived through lipid peroxidation of
3. Repeated blood transfusion because the transfused red cells
polyunsaturated lipids of subcellular membranes
constitute an exogenous load of iron
Not injurious to the cell or its functions
A telltale sign of free radical injury and lipid peroxidation
Morphology
Latin (fuscus – brown) brown lipid
Iron pigment appears as a coarse, golden, granular pigment lying
Appears as a yellow – brown, finely granular cytoplasmic, often
within the cell’s cytoplasm
perinuclear pigment
Localized breakdown of red cells: hemosiderin is found initially in
the phagocytes in the area
Systemic hemosiderosis: found at first in the mononuclear
phagocytes of the liver, bone marrow, spleen, and lymph nodes
and in scattered macrophages throughout other organs such as
skin, pancreas, and kidneys
Hemochromatosis – an inherited disease seen with more extreme
accumulation of iron and is associated with liver, heart, and
pancreatic damage liver fibrosis, heart failure, and diabetes
mellitus
Bilirubin – normal major pigment found in bile 2. Phosphatases associated with the membrane generate phosphate
Derived from hemoglobin but contains no iron groups bind to the calcium
Jaundice is a common clinical disorder caused by excesses of 3. The cycle of calcium and phosphate binding is repeated raising
this pigment within cells and tissues the local concentrations and producing a deposit near the
membrane
Pathologic Calcification 4. Structural change occurs in the arrangement of calcium and
Abnormal tissue deposition of calcium salts, together with smaller phosphate groups generating a microcrystal propagate and
amounts of iron, magnesium, and other mineral salts lead to more calcium deposition
a. Dystrophic Calcification – deposition occurs locally in dying
tissues METASTATIC CALCIFICATION
Occurs despite normal serum levels of calcium and in May occur in normal tissues whenever there is hypercalcemia
the absence of derangements in calcium metabolism Four Principal Causes of Hypercalcemia
b. Metastatic calcification – the deposition of calcium salts in 1. Increased secretion of Parathyroid hormone (PTH) with
otherwise normal tissues subsequent bone resorption
Almost always results from hypercalcemia secondary to a. Hyperparathyroidism due to parathyroid tumors
some disturbance in calcium metabolism b. Ectopic secretion of PTH – related protein by malignant
tumors
DYSTROPHIC CALCIFICATION 2. Destruction of bone tissue, secondary to:
Encountered in areas of necrosis, whether they are of coagulative, a. Primary tumors of bone marrow (multiple myeloma,
caseous, or liquefactive type, and in foci of enzymatic necrosis of leukemia)
fat b. Diffuse skeletal metastasis (breast cancer)
Almost always present in the atheromas of advanced c. Accelerated bone turnover (Paget disease)
atherosclerosis d. Immobilization
Commonly develops in aging or damaged heart valves 3. Vitamin – D related disorders (abnormal sensitivity to Vitamin D
hampering their function a. Vitamin D intoxication
Appears as fine, white granules or clumps, often felt as gritty b. Sarcoidosis – macrophages activate a vitamin D precursors
deposits c. Idiopathic hypercalcemia of infancy (William’s syndrome)
4. Renal failure retention of phosphate secondary
hyperparathyroidism
a. Aluminum intoxication – patients on chronic renal dialysis
b. Milk-alkali syndrome – due to excessive ingestion of calcium
and absorbable antacids such as milk or calcium carbonate
May occur widely throughout the body but principally affects the
interstitial tissues of the gastric mucosa, kidneys, lungs, systemic
arteries, and pulmonary veins
Nephrocalcinosis – massive deposits of mineral salts in the kidney
CELLULAR AGING
Result of a progressive decline in cellular function and viability
caused by genetic abnormalities and the accumulation of cellular
and molecular damage due to the effects of exposure to
Dystrophic calcification of the aortic valve exogenous influences
Changes that Contribute to Cellular Aging
Morphology 1. Decreased cellular replication – “SENESCENCE”
Calcium salts have a basophilic, amorphous granular, sometimes with each cell division there is incomplete replication of
clumped appearance chromosome ends (telomere shortening) cell cycle arresr
Can be intracellular, extracellular, or in both locations Telomeres – short repeated sequences of DNA (TTAGGG)
Heterotopic bone may be formed in the focus of calcification present at the linear ends of chromosomes that are
Single necrotic cells may constitute seed crystals that become important for ensuring the complete replication of
encrusted by the mineral deposits chromosomal ends and for protecting chromosomal termini
Psammoma bodies – lamellated configurations due to progressive from fusion and degradation
acquisition of outer layers e.g. Papillary cancers Telomerase – enzyme that maintained telomere length; a
specialized RNA-protein complex that uses its own RNA as a
Pathogenesis template for adding nucleotides to the ends of chromosomes
Final common pathway: formation of crystalline calcium Werner Syndrome – a rare disease characterized by
phosphate mineral in the form of an apatite similar to the symptom of premature aging, are defective in DNA
hydroxyapatite of bone replication and have a markedly reduced capacity to divide
Calcium is concentrated in membrane-bound vesicles in cells by a Replicative senescence – can also be induced by increased
process that is initiated by membrane damage and: expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p16INK4a and by DNA
1. Calcium ion binds to the phospholipids present in the vesicle damage
membrane
2. Accumulation of metabolic and genetic damage
Cellular life span is determined by a balance between damage
resulting from metabolic events occurring within the cell and
counteracting molecular responses that can impair the damage
Reactive Oxygen Species – by-products of oxidative
phosphorylation cause covalent modifications of proteins, lipids,
and nucleic acids
1. Variation in longevity among different species is inversely
correlated with the rates of mitochondrial generation of O2- anion
radical
2. Overexpression of the antioxidative enzymes SOD and catalase
extends life span in transgenic forms of Drosophilia
Ataxia-telangiectasia – patients display some of the
manifestations of aging at an increased rate mutated gene
encodes a protein involved in repairing double-strand breaks in
DNA