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Disease and Defense Francisco G. La Rosa, MD February 5th, 2007 CELL AND TISSUE INJURY Reading – Recommended: Chapter 1 - "Cell Injury, Adaptation and Death", pp. 3-31 in Kumar et al Basic Pathology, 7th Edition. Learning Objectives: 1. Understand major causes (etiologies) of cell injury? 2. Understand how cell injury contributes to the pathogenesis of disease? 3. Be able to describe major mechanisms of cell injury. 4. How can the study of morphologic change caused by cell injury explain the whys and wherefores of signs and symptoms of disease? 5. What are free radicals, how do they arise, and how do they produce cell injury? 6. Understand how ischemia/hypoxia creates a setting where free radical damage becomes an important cause of cell injury. 7. What are examples of free radicals and how does the body get rid of them. 8. Understand how necrosis differs from apoptosis. 9. Understand how chronic injury leads to adaptation. 10. Be able to describe the major alterations in the cell membrane, mitochondrion and nucleus that occur during cell injury. 11. Understand the four major types of necrosis seen in human disease. 12. Know which morphologic and biochemical alterations during hypoxic injury are reversible and which are irreversible. I. Introduction A. Principle #1. All human disease stems from some form of cell and tissue injury. The study of pathology (the study and diagnosis of disease, and study of mechanisms of disease) is based upon the concept that every human disease results from injury or death of the fundamental unit of the body, the cell. The term “injury” refers to non-lethal, physical damage or alteration from normal of one or more components of the structure of the cell. The damage invariably perturbs normal physiology. The injured cell can not function at full capacity—metabolize nutrients, synthesize needed products, and illness results. Injury can occur “acutely”-producing effects in cells within seconds or minutes, or “chronically”-resulting in cell stress and damage that can persist days, months, or even years. [In practice, pathologists classify diseases as acute or chronic based on the type of inflammatory cells (PMNs, acute; lymphocytes/macrophages, chronic) identified in the injured tissue.] B. Principle #2. Although any cell and tissue in the body can be injured, most human disease occurs from injury to epithelium. Re-call from histology that the human body contains >200 different cell types. These arise by differentiation from totipotent/multipotent stem cells during embryogenesis. The different types of cells are organized into four basic tissues: epithelium (surface/internal), muscle (cardiac, smooth, skeletal), nerve (CNS, PNS), and connective tissue (bone, joint, fat, blood, bone marrow, lymph glands, etc). The epithelium is the tissue that first encounters injurious agents and stimuli from the environment, and it is not surprising that many important human diseases occur from epithelial injury-the major killer of adults, atherosclerosis occurs from injury to the epithelial cells (the so-called endothelium) that line Disease & Defense Block “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 2 arteries and >90% of all adult cancers, as another example, arise from epithelia). On the other hand, there are some very important human diseases that occur from injury to other tissue types-arthritis, leukemia/lymphoma, AIDS, lupus, etc. C. Principle #3. Injury to one tissue invariably affects the other types of tissue that are adjacent. For example, destruction of the stomach epithelium by helicobacter pylori infection (i.e., ulceration of the stomach lining), often leads to damage of the underlying connective tissue of the submucosa and smooth muscle of the muscularis propria, with intense inflammation, destruction of cells and scarring. D. Principle #4. Cell/tissue injury produces “morphologic” change. While cell and tissue injury leads to 1) disease symptoms (complaints voiced by the patient), and 2) disease signs (abnormal findings observed by the physician), it almost always produces a characteristic change in the appearance of the affected tissue that can be seen “grossly” (i.e. visibly by the naked eye) and/or microscopically. It is the identification of this “morphologic” change in the affected tissue that allows the pathologist to diagnose the disease process. Morphologic change is seen readily for example following several types of injury to the liver. Recall that the liver is constructed of millions of hexagonal lobules that are each tethered by portal tracts (each containing branches of the portal vein, hepatic artery, and bile ducts). Blood from the portal vein and hepatic artery filters from the portal tract along the hepatic sinusoids towards the center of the lobule and drains into the central vein. In the normal liver, this lobular architecture is seen easily, the hepatocytes lining the sinusoids appear cuboidal, uniform in shape, typically showing a round, centrally placed nucleus surrounded by abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. Normally, there are no inflammatory cells, such as lymphocytes or PMNs. Following injury, we can identify specific morphologic changes microscopically. In alcoholic hepatitis (inflammation “-itis” in the liver caused by alcohol consumption), we see swollen hepatocytes, death of occasional hepatocytes, an infiltrate of PMNs, and a ropy, eosinophilic material within the cytoplasm of some hepatocytes called “alcoholic hyaline” (representing aggregates of cytokeratin filaments). These histologic changes are usually so characteristic, the pathologists can report a diagnosis of alcoholic hepatitisand rule out other causes for the patient’s liver problems. In other cases, the microscopic exam may only show large accumulations of fat (lipid) within hepatocytes-a morphologic change called “fatty change”. This change is less specific and many potential causes need to be considered (drugs, ethanol, starvation, pregnancy, etc). In summary, the study of the morphologic and macromolecular change induced by injury allows the pathologist to classify and diagnose disease, and to study pathogenesis. II. Outcomes and consequences of injury to the cell/tissue. A. The outcome following an injurious insult depends upon several obvious factors, including the type, severity, and duration of the injury, and the type of cell being injured (a skeletal muscle cell can survive many hours without oxygen, while a cardiac myocyte and neuron die after only a few minutes). Disease & Defense Block “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 3 The ability of a tissue to survive also is a function of the tissue’s ability to undergo repair/replacement. Some tissues undergo continual proliferation (e.g. GI/bone). This facilitates replacement of irreversibly damaged cells. Others can be induced to undergo new cell proliferation when necessary (eg liver). Yet other tissues (eg heart/brain) contain cells that are “post-mitotic” and presumably “never” divide. This prevents replacement of irreversibly damaged cells and such cells are effectively lost forever. In addition, it follows that the ability of the cell/tissue to survive injury also depends upon whether the blood supply to the tissue is compromised, and whether the population of stem cells present in the tissue had survived. B. C. Early, commonly seen changes seen in injured cells. Although different injurious agents may damage the cell in their own specific ways, we often see common patterns of injury with a wide variety of different agents. This is because some compartments of the cell are especially vulnerable. When these structural compartments are damaged, it is not surprising that changes in the cell’s morphology develop. 1. Cell membranes. The cell membrane is perhaps the most important target for both reversible and irreversible injury. The outer cell membrane because it surrounds the cell and directly interacts with the environment is usually the first cellular component to be damaged. In addition, the lipid within the membrane is easily oxidized and supports an oxidative chain reaction called lipid peroxidation. Damage to the membrane may physically break the membrane or inactivate the ion pumps that control the ionic concentrations in the cytoplasm. It is therefore not surprising that cell swelling is a morphologic change commonly seen in nearly all types of injury. Recall that in the normal cell there are impressive Na+, K+ and Ca++ concentration gradients across the membrane that the cell requires. Outside the cell, the Ca++ is approximately 10-3M while within the cytoplasm, the Ca++ is approximately 10-7M. In the injured cell, the accumulation of Na+ leads to an increase in H20 and cell swelling. 2. Mitochondria. Mitochondrial swelling, due to the accumulation of H20 in the matrix compartment, is a morphologic change that occurs very soon after many types of cell injury, especially in those cases where the supply of oxygen to the cell is interrupted. This swelling results from a decrease in the 02- dependent synthesis of ATP required to fuel the ion pumps of the mitochondrial membrane. 3. Endoplastic reticulum. In many types of acute injury, the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum are also distended and the polyribosomes detached from the rough ER. This causes a decrease in the ability of the cell to synthesize new protein. 4. Nucleus. In most types of reversible injury, there are alterations in the appearance of the nucleolus. These changes are not well characterized but there is probably some effect on the synthesis of rRNAs, again causing a decrease in protein synthesis. Complete recovery from injury. The cell swelling, and mitochondrial and ER swelling and dysfunction just mentioned are all potentially reversible, if Disease & Defense Block “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 4 the injurious stimulus is removed. Cells have a remarkable ability to repair themselves. Damaged organelles can be degraded via autophagosomes, damaged membranes replenished and repaired via new membrane and lipid synthesis, denatured proteins removed via ubiquitination and proteasome degradation, and damage to DNA chromatin repaired via a large assortment of DNA repair enzymes. Once membranes are restored, intracellular ion concentrations return to normal and cell and organelle swelling abates. D. E. Adaptation to the injury. Some forms of cell/tissue injury and stress while not lethal, persist for long periods of time. In order to maintain tissue “homeostasis” the tissue adapts. Four classic types of adaptation are hypertrophy, atrophy, metaplasia, and hyperplasia. 1. Hypertrophy - an increase in the size of the cell secondary to an increase in cell function. There is typically an increase in the number of mitochondria and ER, etc. Example: enlargement (hypertrophy) of the left ventricle secondary to severe, longstanding hypertension. With hypertension, each myocyte works harder and this causes the cell to produce more organelles. 2. Atrophy - decrease in the size and functional capacity of the cell. Example: shrinkage (atrophy) of skeletal muscles following motor neuron loss from infection by poliovirus. 3. Metaplasia - replacement of one type of tissue with another in response to an injury. Example: chronic reflux esophagitis leads to replacement of the stratified squamous epithelium along the distal esophagus by a columnar type of intestinal epithelium. Or replacement of the pseudostratified columnar epithelium of the bronchus by stratified squamous epithelium in response to thermal injury from tobacco smoke. 4. Hyperplasia - an increase in the number of cells of a tissue in response to a stimulus or injury. Example: increase in the number of adrenal cortical cells secondary to a tumor that produces an ACTHlike polypeptide. Cell death (necrosis). Cell/tissue does not survive the injury or adapt: the cell/tissue dies. There are two basic types of cell death: necrosis and apoptosis. 1. Classic cell/tissue necrosis. This is the type of cell death usually seen following ischemia. Ischemia is hypoxic injury (meaning injury from too little oxygen) caused by a problem with the vascular blood flow to the tissue. Cell death from ischemia is called “ischemic (or coagulative)” necrosis (see below). Typically in ischemic necrosis, large portions of tissue, containing thousands of contiguous cells, die all at once. The transition from reversible to irreversible hypoxic injury is still poorly defined. Probably reflects progression to critical changes in the cell membrane that cannot be reversed, associated with an elevation in the intracellular concentration of Ca+2, shut down of mitochondrial ATP synthesis, release of lysosomal hydrolases. Ca+2 leaks across the plasma membrane into the cell and is released Disease & Defense Block “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 5 internally from storage depots of Ca+2 in the ER and mitochondria. Once this occurs, Ca+2-dependent proteases and lipases become activated; the mitochondrial membrane permeability transition pore (MTP) is opened, with a loss in the ability to make ATP. In this “classic” type of cell necrosis, the cytoplasm of the dead cell is swollen, the mitochondria and ER appear dilated, there is prominent blebbing of the plasma membrane, and loss of membrane integrity. This type of cell necrosis occurs from ischemia/anoxia (see hypoxic cell injury below), and from exposure to toxins/chemicals. Analysis of the chromosomal DNA from the necrotic cell by agarose gel electrophoresis reveals a nonspecific degradative smear of DNA fragments. 2. III. Apoptosis. There is a second type of cell death-apoptosis or programmed cell death. Apoptosis, unlike necrosis, tends to affect scattered, individual cells rather than a large area of tissue. In contrast to classic cell necrosis, apoptosis is highly regulated, switched on by the binding of extracellular ligands to specific cell surface receptors (eg Fas ligand and its receptor). Also important are signals coming from the mitochondrion-(cytochrome c/apoptosis inducing factor AIF) that activate caspases (a class of protease) and an apoptotic-specific nuclear DNA endonuclease, etc. In the apoptotic type of dead cell, the cytoplasm is not swollen but shrunken, there are large plasma membrane blebs, and the nuclear DNA appear uniformly compacted and very dense. Eventually, the cell breaks up into small membrane bound vesicles. These are taken up by macrophages. Analysis of the chromosomal DNA by agarose gel electrophoresis reveals a degradative pattern that reflects internucleosomal (nucleosomal ladder) breakage of the DNA. Morphology of "necrosis". The recognition of dead cells by light microscopy can provide critical information for the pathologist and is often essential in order to make certain diagnosis. Over the years, pathologists have learned to identify four classic types of necrosis. A. Coagulative necrosis - dead cell remains a ghost-like remnant of its former self. Classically seen in the heart following a myocardial infarction ("infarction" means "necrosis" secondary to vascular insufficiency). The necrotic myocyte has a cytoplasm which is more eosinophilic than normal. The nucleus shrinks and the chromatin becomes deeply basophilic as it clumps. This pattern of chromatin staining is called "pyknosis". The pyknotic nucleus may then fragment, an appearance known as "karyorrhexis". Eventually, the pyknotic clumps are broken down and disappear - a process called "karyolysis". B. Liquefactive necrosis - dead cell dissolves away as lysosomal hydrolases digest cellular components. Commonly seen in the brain and spleen, and with acute infection. C. Caseous necrosis - seen only in tuberculosis. The central portion of an infected lymph node is necrotic (attributed to toxic affects of mycobacteria) and has a chalky white appearance, not unlike the milk protein casein. “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 6 Disease & Defense Block D. IV. V. Fat necrosis - refers to necrotic adipose tissue typically following acute pancreatitis or trauma. In fat necrosis, fats are hydrolyzed into free fatty acids which precipitate with Ca++ producing a peculiar chalky gray material characteristic of "fat necrosis". Causes of cell and tissue injury: A. Physical agents - trauma, heat, etc. B. Chemical and drugs - drug toxicity, poisoning, etc. C. Infection - pathogenic bacteria, virus, fungi, protozoa, etc. D. Immunologic insults - anaphylaxis, autoimmunity, etc. E. Genetic derangement-phenylketonuria, cystic fibrosis, etc. F. Nutritional imbalance - atherosclerosis, protein and vitamin deficiency, etc. G. Hypoxia - cells receive too little 02. Multiple causes - primary lung disease, heart failure, shock, arterial or venous thrombosis, etc. Hypoxia leads to ischemic injury, probably the single must important type of injury seen in clinical medicine. Different cells vary in the ability to tolerate hypoxia. Neurons can tolerate only 3 to 5 minutes of hypoxia while fat cells and skeletal muscle cells survive many hours. A. B. Reversible changes: 1) 2) 3) 4) ATP Na pump (cell swelling) glycolysis, pH protein synthesis Irreversible changes: 1) activation of lysosomal enzymes 2) DNA, protein degradation 3) Ca 2+ influx Hypoxia - some of the injury simply stems from the cells inability to make sufficient ATP that is required to maintain viability. A second type of injury is as important. This injury stems from the production of oxygen radicals that follow 02 therapy, acute inflammation and reperfusion of hypoxic tissue. 1. 02 therapy - high levels of 02 are needed acutely to keep the patient alive. However, high levels of 02 radicals are also produced and have toxic effects on cells - especially in the lung. 2. Acute inflammation - PMNs have enzymes such as myeloperoxidase which produce oxygen radicals. Many hypoxic tissues are infiltrated with PMNs. “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 7 Disease & Defense Block 3. C. Reperfusion. In hypoxia, xanthine dehydrogenase is proteolytically converted to xanthine oxidase. Once the hypoxia is corrected, the xanthine oxidase produces activated oxygen species. Oxygen free radicals. At present, there is a lot of interest in how these radicals are formed and how the cell protects itself from this injury. A free radical is a chemical species with an unpaired election. Important species include 02, and 0H. These free radicals can chemically damage proteins, DNA, RNA and trigger lipid peroxidation in cell membranes. Free radicals are generated by intrinsic oxidases (present in the ER of all cells and in PMNs) and radiation especially in the setting of high p02. e.g. 02 oxidase 02 (superoxide) Superoxide can be removed by superoxide dismutase (SOD) 202 2H+ H202 + 02 However, if catalase is not sufficiently active the H202 can be converted to highly reactive 0H (the hydroxyl radical) via: 1) ionizing radiation H202 0H + 0H 2) Fe++ + H202 Fe+++ + 0H + 0H (Fenton reaction) 3) H202 + 02 0H + 0H + 02 (Haber-Weiss reaction) Fortunately, antioxidants (uric acid, vitamin E, etc.) catalase, and glutathione peroxidase serve to eliminate these radicals. catalase 02 + 2 H20 a) 2 H202 b) 2 0H + 2 GSH 2 H20 + GSSG glutathione peroxidase Disease & Defense Block “Cell and Tissue Injury” Page 8 Important Causes of Cell & Tissue Injury I. Injury from temperature extremes. Humans must maintain a temperature no lower than about 30C, nor higher than about 42C. A. Burns. Burns cause about 5000 deaths annually in the U.S. Mortality and morbidity from a burn injury depend upon: 1. total surface area affected. 2. depth of burn injury. In a “partial thickness” burn, the dermis and dermal appendages survive. Partial thickness burns typically show blistering. In a “full thickness” burn, there is total destruction of the epidermis and dermis. 3. whether there is thermal injury to the lungs. 4. effective treatment. Complications of serious burns include: a. neurogenic shock and large losses of fluid. b. infection-especially with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staph. Infection of the burn can lead to endocarditis, sepsis, septic shock, and renal failure. c. hypermetabolic state - the metabolic rate may double with severe burn injury. d. anemia-bone marrow production is suppressed. B. Hyperthermia -elevated body temperature. 1. Exertional heat stroke - (i.e. marathon runners): hot, dry skin, usually (not always) there is cessation of sweating. Usually lactic acidosis. May lead to rhabdomyolysis (breakdown of skeletal muscle fibers), necrosis of renal tubules (ATN), widespread intravascular coagulation (DIC), multi organ failure. 2. C. Classic heat stroke - young, elderly, obese in hot humid weather. Hot, dry skin. No lactic acidosis, but respiratory alkalosis. Hypotension, coma. ATN and DIC are very uncommon. Hypothermia. Injury from prolonged exposure to the cold. Slowing of metabolic processes, especially in the brain, may lead to coma and death. 1. Freezing of cells and tissues - results in an increase in local concentrations of salt as intracellular water crystallizes. Proteins may denature, cell organelles may be injured. 2. may cause a decrease in blood flow form vasoconstriction and from an increase in blood viscosity. Organ damage, loss of digits, toes, etc. become evident once blood flow is restored. II. Electrical injury. In addition to burn injury, the exposure to electric current may cause sudden disruption of neural impulses and lead to cardiac arrest. Outcome is a function of tissue conductance, the amount of heat generated, and the intensity of the current. Dry skin is fairly resistant. However, wet skin is a good conductor. Exposure of wet skin to even household levels of current (120 or 220 Volts) can trigger ventricular fibrillation. Exposure to AC (alternating current, which is used in the US) can cause tetany and prolong the contact with the electrical source. Spasm of chest wall muscles can cause asphyxia.