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IMMS 1 Revision (part 1) Nick Richards & Byron Haywood-Alexander Topics 1. Cells 2. Homeostasis 3. Molecular building blocks 4. DNA/RNA 5. Mitosis/Meiosis 6. Genetic disease 1. Cells Functional unit of the body, compartmentalised by a cell membrane, containing intracellular organelles and cytoplasm. Many cellular metabolic processes occur here including those that allow molecules into and out of the cell. Require an electron microscope Organelles Nucleus - cell ‘brain’, double nuclear membrane, DNA, nucleolus produce rRNA Mitochondria - cell ‘battery’, oxidative phosphorylation, mtDNA, double membrane (inner highly folded) ● Outer membrane - lipid synthesis and fatty acid metabolism ● Inner membrane* - Respiratory (electron transport) chain ATP production ● Matrix - Tricarboxylic acid (Krebs’) cycle ● Intramembranous space - nucleotide phosphorylation Endoplasmic reticulum - flat folded sheets of membrane, nuclear pores ● Rough - protein production ● Smooth - membrane lipid production, protein processing Organelles Golgi apparatus - parallel membrane sheets - process and modify ER products ● Cis (nuclear) face - receive smooth ER vesicles, protein phosphorylation ● Medial Golgi - modify products by adding sugars ● Trans Golgi Network - proteolysis of peptides into active forms, sorting of molecules into vesicles Vesicles - spherical membrane bound organelles to transport and store material ● Cell surface derived: pinocytotic and phagocytic vesicles ● Golgi-derived transport vesicles ● ER-derived transport vesicles ● Lysosomes ● Peroxisomes Organelles Lysosomes (waste disposal system) - contain many acid hydrolases. H+ATPase on membrane creates optical pH 5 environment for enzymes. Peroxisomes - contain enzymes that break down long-chain fatty acids D-amino acid oxidase, Catalase, Urate oxidase Cytoskeleton - filament proteins supporting structure of the cell ● Microfilaments - Actin forms a mesh (cell cortex) to inner cell membrane ● Intermediate filaments - differ from cell to cell - spread tensile forces ● Microtubules - Tubulin arise from centromere (2 centrioles) - not RBC Cell membranes ● Phospholipid bilayer ● Contain glycolipids, glycoproteins, cholesterol and embedded proteins. Proteins: Transmembrane (integral), Catalytic, Structural (pumps, gates, receptors, adhesion molecules, energy transducers). Cell membrane function ? ● Barrier the external environment and compartmentalise the cell ● Semi-permeable: o absorb nutrients and expel waste o maintain intracellular ionic balance ● Cell response to signals ● Molecules for intercellular adhesion ● Insulate - myelin sheath Cell Junctions Occluding junctions - prevent molecule leakage ● Tight junctions Anchoring junctions ● Actin filament sites o cell-cell junction (adherens junctions) o cell-matrix junctions (focal adhesions) ● Intermediate filament sites o cell-cell junction (desmosomes) o cell-matrix junction (hemidesmosome) Communicating ● Gap junctions ● Chemical synapses Endocytosis Energetic process to absorb/engulf molecules into cell. Phagocytosis* (eating) - macromolecules/ entire cell to form phagosomes Pinocytosis (drinking) - dissolved solutes Receptor mediated* - specific, depressed areas: coated pits. Exocytosis 1. Vesicles from the Golgi complex 1. Fuse with the plasma membrane 1. Expulsion of waste OR Secretion of enzymes/hormones Movement across membranes Movement types ● Passive diffusion ● Facilitated diffusion through protein channels with(out) carrier proteins ● Active transport Examples ● Gaseous exchange along chemical gradient ● Glucose - protein assisted which is upregulated by insulin. Voltage gated channels activated by action potentials. ● NaK ATPase pump - going against chemical and electrical gradients Receptors Gateway to intracellular signals ● ● ● ● open a channel activate an intracellular enzyme induce second messenger migrate to nucleus as receptorligand complex 2.Homeostasis? Control of the internal environment Communication Types ● Endocrine - hormones ● Nervous - currents and neurotransmitters ● Immune - antibodies, cytokines, interleukins Receptor and ligand required Cell to cell signaling Immunity - T lymphocytes secreting IL2, cytokines Neuro synapses, neuromuscular junction, clotting Endocrine system hypothalamus, pituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, thymus, pancreas, kidney, gonads, adrenals Types of hormone Peptide - insulin, growth hormone, TSH ● From short chain of AA to small proteins ● Some glycoproteins ● Hydrophilic - receptors Steroid - testosterone, oestrogen, cortisol ● Synthesised from cholesterol ● Different enzymes produce hormones ● Lipid soluble - cross membranes but require transport proteins Amino-acid derivative - adrenaline, T4, T3 ● synthesised from tyrosine Feedback Positive feedback - amplification of signal ● Clotting cascade ● Oxytocin during childbirth Negative feedback loop - centre of homeostasis ● Blood sugar regulation ● Temperature regulation ● Blood pressure regulation ● Metabolism/thyroid regulation Water Distribution Total body water ~ 42L 60% of body weight Cl- K+ HCO3- 40% of body weight intracellular fluid - 28L Interstitial - 10L 20% of body weight extracellular fluid - 14L Plasma - 3L Na+ Transcellular 1L -CSF -Digestive juices Water Homeostasis ● Fluid compartments are in osmotic equilibrium ● Solutes (osmotically active) in ICF and ECF create osmotic gradients ● Any change in solutes in any compartment results in a water movement ECF Urea Na+ Glucose ICF K+ Water Homeostasis Water intake: ● Drink - thirst, social ● Diet ● IV fluid Water loss: ● Kidneys ● Insensible losses o sweat o breath o vomiting o faeces ? Regulatory hormones ● Antidiuretic hormone ● Aldosterone ● Atrial natriuretic peptide Definitions Osmosis - net movement of solvent molecules through a semipermeable membrane to a higher solute concentration. Osmolality - measure of the number of dissolved particles per kg of fluid. Osmolarity - measure of the number of dissolved particles per L of fluid. Osmotic pressure - pressure applied to a solution, by a pure solvent, required to prevent inward osmosis. Through a semipermeable membrane. Oncotic pressure - form of osmotic pressure exerted by proteins that tends to pull fluid into its solution. Water homeostasis mechanisms Water loss from ECF ● ↑ solute or ↓ fluid results in an ↑ osmolality ● Detected by osmoreceptors in hypothalamus ● Release of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) from posterior pituitary ● ADH acts by increasing water reabsorption in the kidneys ● Dilutes solute and returns ECF water to normal Decreased renal blood flow ● ↓ water in ECF results in ↓ circulating volume results in ↓ renal blood flow ● Kidney release of Renin and activation of RAAS ● Angiotensin II and aldosterone increase Na+ reabsorption (exchange K+ and H+) bringing water. Also stimulates ADH. Dehydration ● Low intake ● Excess loss ● Low ADH ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Water deprivation Vomiting Diarrhoea Burns Heavy Sweating Diabetes insipidus Diabetes mellitus Drugs Water excess ● High intake ● Decreased loss ● Excess ADH ● ● Hyponatraemia Cerebral over-perfusion o headache o confusion o convulsions Oedema Oedema - excess water in the intercellular tissue space. ● inflammatory (leakage) ● Venous (increased end pressure) ● Lymphatic (blocked) ● Hypoalbuminaemic Serous effusion - excess water in a body cavity. Sodium Hypernatraemia ● Water deficit o low intake o osmotic diuresis o DI ● Sodium excess o mineralocorticoid excess S+S: cerebral intracellular dehydration (confusion, tremors, irritability), hypertension, oedema/serous effusion Hyponatraemia ● Artefactual ● Sodium loss o Diuresis o Addison’s disease ● Excess water o IV fluids o SIADH ● Excess water & sodium o Oedema (CCF, liver disease) S+S: intracellular overhydration Potassium Hyperkalaemia ● Decreased K+ loss o renal failure o diuretic/ACE-inhibitors o Addison’s ● Redistribution o acidosis S+S: risk of cardiac arrest Hypokalaemia ● Potassium loss o D+V o Diuretics o Hypomagnesaemia o Conn’s and Cushing’s ● Redistribution o Alkalosis o Refeeding syndrome Excretion from intestines and kidneys (Na/KS+S: ATPase pump controlled by Weakness, dysrhythmia aldosterone) Calcium Hypercalcaemia ● Hyperparathyroidism ● Malignancy o Skeletal mets o PTH-like hormone from tumours ● Vitamin D toxicity ● Granulomatous disease (TB) Hypocalcaemia S+S: Metastatic calcification Bones, stone, psychic groans, abdominal moans, thrones. S+S: tetany, carpopedal spasm ● Vit D deficiency ● Mg deficiency ● Renal disease ● Parathyroidectomy ● Intestinal malabsorption 3. Molecular building blocks Simple molecules form complex, large macromolecules with functions: ● Structure ● Osmotic ● Enzyme ● Other specific Carbohydrates/Saccharide/Sugars ● Cn(H2O)n Mono, Di, Oligo, Poly ● Groups o Hydroxyl o Aldehyde o Ketone o Carboxyl ● OH group react with OH/NH = O/N-glycosidic bond ● Polysaccharides: 1-4 and 1-6 bonding forming Glycogen, Starch Lipids/Fatty acids ● Straight hydrocarbon chain with carboxyl group ● Eicosanoids - major biological function o derived from eicosanoic acid Nucleotides ● Sugar + nuclear base + single phosphate group o Purine derivative o Pyrimidine derivative Aminoacids ● Charge determined by all 3 groups ● Change at different pH ● Side chain determine polarity and non-polarity ● Strong peptide bond CO-NH. Requires proteolytic enzymes. Chiral centres Most sugars in the human body are D form, whereas protein take L-form! Proteins ● Long AA chains ● Varied function - structure dependent ● Structure o Primary o Secondary o Tertiary o Quaternary Enzymes ● Biological catalyst - bind but to not get used up ● Speed-up and regulate reaction rate ● Optimum temperature and pH ● Activation, modification, inhibition Disease marker! ● Isoenzymes - different structure, catalyse same reaction Drug target! Co-enzymes ● Organic structures (nonprotein) that help maximise organic enzyme active site ● Cannot catalyse alone ● Metal ions (Fe2+, Mg2+, Zn2+), vitamin derivatives (thiamine pyrophosphate) ● Activation-transfer coenzymes ● Oxidation-reduction coenzymes Forces ● Van der Waals - weak attractive/repulsive force between all atoms due to fluctuating electrical charge. ● Hydrogen bonds - interaction between polar groups. Important in AA side chains, O/N in main chain and water. ● Hydrophobic forces - as uncharged and non-polar side chain repel water, they tend toward a protein core. ● Ionic bonds - between fully/partially charged groups ● Disulphide bonds - very strong covalent bonding between sulphur atoms. DNA/RNA ● Base Nucleotides ● Complementary Base Pairing ● DNA Polymerase ● Sense and Anti-Sense Strands ● RNA Maternal Chromosome Paternal Chromosome Gene locus Alleles Replication of DNA ● Double stranded -> Single stranded o Topoisomerase o DNA Helicase ● DNA polymerase ● Semi-conservative replication Transcription ANTI-SENSE DNA ● Double stranded -> Single stranded o Topoisomerase o DNA Helicase ● RNA polymerase ● Messenger RNA (mRNA) Translation ● mRNA -> Ribosome ● Splicing o Introns o Exons ● tRNA ○ Anticodon Mis-Sense and Non-Sense ● Mis-Sense o Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) o Different amino-acid o Examples? Sickle Cell (CAG -> CTG) ● Non-Sense o Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) o Premature stop codon o Examples? Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy GOWER’S SIGN