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LESSON 2.5 WORKBOOK How do cells die? DEFINITIONS OF TERMS Anti-oxidants – a molecule that inhibits the activity of reactive oxygen species preventing them damaging DNA. For a complete list of defined terms, see the Glossary. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 Cells can have three fates: They can divide, they can differentiate or they can die. But while cell death following trauma is a passive process cells also have a built-in program to actively destroy themselves, called apoptosis. In a normal cell, prosurvival signals prevent cells destroying themselves, but when a cell ages or when its DNA becomes too damaged to repair, the cell can no longer respond to prosurvival signals are and the apoptosis program is switched on. This lesson investigates what happens during apoptosis and how cancer cells can cheat death. Cell responses to damage: apoptosis With the exception of stem cells that can replicate indefinitely, cells, like people have finite lifespans. For most cells lifespan is dictated by the amount of DNA damage they accumulate. Each time a cell divides its DNA, errors in replication cause the DNA to mutate randomly. External events can also damage DNA in addition to the normal errors in replication it accumulates at each cell division. Normally the cell will stop cell cycle progression temporarily so that DNA repair proteins can fix any DNA damage. DNA repair enzymes are not 100% successful however, and some mutations will escape, eventually leading to functional defects that are the equivalent of cellular aging. As cells age they will acquire so many mutations that they can no longer function normally at all. Then the cell will die. What kind of external events damage DNA? Cellular DNA is particularly vulnerable to the byproducts of the normal respiration processes cells need to survive: When oxygen is broken down in the cell it produces reactive oxygen species (ROS), compounds that react with DNA causing mutations or breaks in DNA. Any compound that behaves like ROS in this way are called mutagens. Some, but not all carcinogens are mutagens. Another significant mutagen that originates outside the cell is the UV radiation in sunlight. UV radiation is obviously particularly dangerous for skin cells. The DNA damage that mutagens like ROS and UV radiation cause is one of the major causes of cellular aging. As a result many so-called anti-aging products feature anti-oxidants, compounds that eliminate the ROS produced by oxidation reactions, thereby hopefully delaying the aging process. Similarly certain foods (like blueberries) that are high in anti-oxidants are recommended because they can scavenge the ROS produced as a result of cellular metabolism, thereby staving off cellular aging. Notes: ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ 72 LESSON READINGS DEFINITIONS OF TERMS Apoptosis – the process of programmed cell death in multicellular organisms characterized by cell shrinkage, nuclear fragmentation, degradation of proteins, and release of cellular “blebs”. This is an organized and planned death of a cell. Necrosis – the premature death of a normal cell in which it bursts, randomly releasing fragments of proteins and DNA into surrounding tissue. This unplanned death is disorganized. Phagocytic cells – cells that are responsible for consuming foreign particles, bacteria, and cellular blebs. These cells break down contents of what they consume and recycle them for other cells to use. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 The more mutations cellular DNA accumulates, whether due to errors of replication or damage by ROS or other mutagens the more likely they are to prevent the cell from functioning normally, and the more unlikely DNA repair mechanisms will be able to fix them during the cell cycle. At that point the cell will activate a program to kill itself called apoptosis. Figure 1: An apoptotic cell (a) and a necrotic cell (b) show exhibit two types of cell death. Apoptosis is a regulated dismantling of the cell, while necrosis is an unregulated explosion of cellular contents. During apoptosis, the cell shrinks itself down in size, and produces enzymes that break down all the contents of the cell, including cellular proteins and DNA. The cell debris this breakdown causes is then released from the dying cell in little packets known as cellular ‘blebs’. The cellular blebs end up outside the cells where cells of the immune system called phagocytes (from the Greek meaning ‘cell eater’) consume them by phagocytosis. Macrophages are an example of such immune system phagocytes. Once macrohpage has phagocytosed a bleb containing protein and DNA debris from an apoptosing cell it recycles the contents of the bleb for its own use. Apoptosis is therefore like cellular suicide: a cell takes its own life because it is no longer functional. As it dies it is cannibalized by its neighbors to the ultimate benefit of the community as a whole. While we are young the gap left by the cell that has apoptosed is rapidly filled by a new cell that has just been produced, but as we get older we come less efficient at replacing damaged cells and tissue. In this way cellular aging translates into bodily aging. The scenario in which ROS damage DNA and activate apoptosis is known as intrinsic apoptosis. This means that the signal to start producing the enzymes that digest the damaged cell’s DNA and proteins comes from inside the cell itself – in this case the intrinsic signal is provided by DNA damage. A second type of apoptosis is known as extrinsic apoptosis. In this case the signal to start producing the apoptosis enzymes comes from outside the cell. Examples of signals like this are lack of oxygen and tissue damage. A good example of an extrinsic signal occurs when a cell is infected with a virus and activates the immune pathway that ends up with killer T cells. The killer T cells then send a signal to the infected cell telling it to initiate apoptosis. MC Questions: 1. When is apoptosis activated? (Circle all correct.) aa. A cell has accumulated too much DNA damage. bb. A cell cannot enter the cell cycle. cc. A cell has grown too large. dd. A cell has received signals to die. 2. Which of the following is a difference between apoptosis and necrosis? (Circle all correct.) aa. Apoptosis is only activated from external signals necrosis is not. bb. Necrosis activates immune response, apoptosis does not. cc. Apoptosis causes the cell to break down, necrosis does not. dd. Apoptosis is organized, necrosis is not. ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ 73 LESSON READINGS Not all cell death occurs through apoptosis. When a normal cell is physically damaged by trauma it can suddenly burst and release its contents explosively to the environment. This is known as necrosis. In this case also release of the cell contents recruits immune phagocytes to the area and they consume the cell debris. The best way to describe the difference between apoptosis and necrosis is that apoptosis dismantles the cell in an organized fashion whereas necrosis is an unorganized cellular explosion. Apoptosis: a struggle between life and death DEFINITIONS OF TERMS The severe DNA damage that triggers apoptosis is detected by a specific protein called p53. The protein p53 plays a critical role in controlling DNA damage within normal cells: ■■ When DNA damage has occurred p53 is the protein that stops the cell cycle progressing. ■■ When DNA damage is fixable p53 is the protein that activates transcription of the DNA repair enzymes that can repair the DNA. Caspases – a family of proteins involved in apoptosis that are responsible for breaking down proteins and DNA in the cell. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 MC Questions: 3. Which of the following is a direct activity of p53? (Circle all correct.) aa. Control entrance of cell into cell cycle. bb. Repair DNA damage. cc. Activate apoptosis. dd. Break down proteins for apoptosis. ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ However if DNA damage is irreparable, p53 is the protein that activates apoptosis. How? Cellular proteins and DNA are broken down during apoptosis because the dying cells start to express a series of enzymes: proteases called caspases that break down proteins) and DNAases (that break down DNA) that normal cells don’t produce. Signaling the cell to produce these enzymes is a critical first step in switching on the apoptosis program and p53 can control expression of these enzymes both directly and indirectly: ■■ p53 controls expression of apoptosis enzymes directly by activating expression of transcription factors that bind to the protease and DNAase genes. When the transcription factor proteins are expressed and bind to the genes this permits the enzyme genes to be transcribed (we learned how transcription factors work in the last lesson. Figure 2: The process by which apoptosis is triggered by p53 activation which leads to degradation of proteins and DNA by caspases, forming 'blebs' that are consumed by other cells. 4. Which proteins are directly responsible for degrading the contents of the cell for apoptosis? (Circle all correct.) aa. p53 bb. Rb cc. DNA repair proteins dd. Caspases ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ 74 LESSON READINGS ■■ p53 can activate apoptosis indirectly by damaging mitochondria. Mitochondria are the organelles chiefly responsible for generating energy in cells. To generate energy they need an intact membrane. P53 can send signals to the mitochondria that cause their membranes to become leaky. Apoptosis occurs in cells with leaky mitochondria. p53 is called a pro-apoptosis factor, but it is not the only one. Both the intrinsic and extrinsic apoptosis pathways also activate other pro-apoptotic factors that can poke holes in mitochondria and make them leak (these include the proteins Bax and Bak, as seen in Figure 3). DEFINITIONS OF TERMS MC Questions: 5. During which step of apoptosis is there a competition between proapoptotic factors and pro-survival factors? (Circle all correct.) aa. Extrinsic signaling pathway. bb. DNA damage. cc. Making holes in mitochondria. dd. Degrading cellular proteins. ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ Pro-apoptotis factors – proteins that promote apoptosis by making mitochondrial membranes leaky. Pro-survival factors – proteins that inhibit apoptosis by preventing mitochondria leaking, thereby promoting cell survival. Figure 3: Pro-apoptotic factors like Bax or Bak make holes in the mitochondria to release contents. Release of contents activates caspases which leads to apoptosis. Alternatively, prosurvival factors, like Bcl-2, inhibit formation of mitochondrial pores and prevent apoptosis. Apoptosis happens when a cell’s DNA is too damaged to repair, but the mechanisms that lead to apoptosis are very sensitive and are already primed and ready to go in cells with normal amounts of DNA damage. They are prevented in these normal cells because surrounding tissues secrete survival signals to keep apoptosis under control so that it is only activated when necessary. These signals are called pro-survival factors (an example is Bcl-2 in Figure 3). Bcl-2 can promote cell survival by activating mechanisms that repair the holes in mitochondria to prevent them leaking. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 Bcl-2 is a pro-survival signals because it opposes the indirect effects of p53. Other pro-survival signals can also turn down the volume on p53 so it behaves appropriately. Because p53 controls DNA damage in both normal and dysfunctional cells it is important that it doesn’t overreact to normal damage by starting apoptosis in normal cells. 6. Which is the most common way that cancer cells subvert the activation of apoptosis? (Circle all correct.) aa. Inactivating pro-survival proteins. bb. Inactivating pro-apoptosis proteins. cc. Hyperactivating pro-survival proteins. dd. Hyperactivating pro-apoptosis proteins. ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ 75 LESSON READINGS DEFINITIONS OF TERMS NF-кB – a transcription factor that promotes expression of prosurvival proteins. This protein is often overactive in cancer cells. Tumor suppressor protein – a protein that controls cell proliferation so that cells don’t proliferate abnormally. This includes proteins that prevent growth and survival. How cancer cells cheat death MC Questions: Because apoptosis destroys cells with serious mutations that affect their functions it is a critical mechanism for preventing tumor formation. As we will see in later units, both the intrinsic apoptosis pathway (via p53) and the extrinsic apoptosis pathways (via immune cells) are pretty efficient at killing off cells that have accumulated tumorigenic DNA damage. However, some of these cells can go on to accumulate further mutations that either inhibit pro-apoptotic pathways, or hyperactivate pro-survival pathways. In either case a cell that is resistant to apoptosis control will result. 7. What is the direct activity of NF-кB? (Circle all correct.) aa. Bind pro-survival receptors. bb. Activate expression of prosurvival genes. cc. Mutate pro-apoptotic proteins. dd. Prevent leakage of mitochondrial contents. Tumor cells most commonly resist apoptosis is by inhibiting pro-apoptotic proteins like p53. As a result upwards of 60-80% of cancers have mutations that inactivate p53. This shows just how important p53 is for controlling DNA damage in cells. When tumor cells are investigated to see what mutations they have, mutations that disrupt the apoptosis pathways often coincide with mutations that activate survival pathways. The transcription factor, NF-кB (pronounced NF-kappa B) activates one of the most powerful pro-survival pathways. NF-кB binds to genes that prevent apoptosis being initiated. So when the NF-кB pathway is overactive, as it is in many tumors, apoptosis can’t be switched on. So there are two ways that tumor cells interfere with apoptosis: 1. They can switch off pathways that switch apoptosis on. 2. They can switch on pathways that switch apoptosis off. In both cases the cancer cell cheats death. Apoptosis is only one of many mechanisms that cells used to control their growth. Proteins that control cell growth are called tumor suppressors and we have learned about several in this unit: ■■ The retinoblastoma protein (Rb) makes sure the cell passes through the cell cycle ‘gate’ with intact DNA ■■ The cell cycle checkpoint proteins (INK proteins) make sure the hand-off between the different stages of the cell cycle doesn’t occur until the cell is ready. ■■ The pro-apoptosis proteins (p53, Bax/Bak) make sure that cells that are too damaged cells die. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 These regulators of the community of cells promote the ‘laws’ that keep the tissue community intact. Now that we know what the normal laws are, the next unit will help us understand how cancer cells violate them. ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ 76 STUDENT RESPONSES Describe 2-3 ways that cancer cells can disrupt apoptosis. Hint: Think of the steps necessary for apoptosis to occur from the initial apoptosis stimuli (either activation of apoptotic signaling or DNA damage) to cell blebbing. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Remember to identify your sources _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ 77 TERMS TERM For a complete list of defined terms, see the Glossary. Wo r k b o o k Lesson 2.5 DEFINITION Anti-oxidants A molecule that inhibits the activity of reactive oxygen species preventing them damaging DNA. Apoptosis The process of programmed cell death in multicellular organisms characterized by cell shrinkage, nuclear fragmentation, degradation of proteins, and release of cellular 'blebs'. This is an organized and planned death of a cell. Caspases A family of proteins involved in apoptosis that are responsible for breaking down proteins and DNA in the cell. Necrosis The premature death of a normal cell in which it bursts, randomly releasing fragments of proteins and DNA into surrounding tissue. This unplanned death is disorganized. NF-кB A transcription factor that promotes expression of pro-survival proteins. This protein is often overactive in cancer cells. Phagocytic cells Cells that are responsible for consuming foreign particles, bacteria, and cellular blebs. These cells break down contents of what they consume and recycle them for other cells to use. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) Chemically reactive molecules of oxygen that can mutate or break DNA to cause damage. Pro-apoptotic factors Proteins that promote apoptosis by making mitochondrial membranes leaky. Pro-survival factors Proteins that inhibit apoptosis by preventing mitochondria leaking, thereby promoting cell survival. Tumor suppressor protein A protein that controls cell proliferation so that cells don’t proliferate abnormally. This includes proteins that prevent growth and survival. 78