Benji's MCB Block 3 Notes
Benji's MCB Block 3 Notes
Benji's MCB Block 3 Notes
com
Glanzmann’s Thrombasthenia:
o Autosomal recessive
o Missing glycoprotein IIb or IIIa (“glue”) platelets can’t stick together
hemophilia
Malaria:
o Plasmodium falciparum attacks Glycophorin A cells adhese anemia,
hepatosplenomegaly, ischemia.
Hereditary Spherocytosis
o Autosomal dominant
o Non-functional spectrin, ankyrin, or protein 4.1 RBCs become round
anemia, jaundice, splenomegaly.
o Tx: folate, splenectomy.
Liposomes can be used for Drug Delivery – 3 components needed within the liposome:
o Drug (either hydrophilic, or lipid-soluble)
o Antibody (homing peptide) to bring the entire liposome to the antigen
o PEG – protect from phagocytes.
MITOCHONDRIAL DISORDERS
Bcl-2 proteins (BAD, BAX) in cytosol poke hole in mitochondria (MPTP) cyt c
leaks out apoptosome forms caspase cascade apoptosis
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Hsp70 and signal translocation sequence target protein to TOM TIM signal
sequence cleaved hsp60 help fold the rest inside mito.
Alpers Syndrome (autosomal recessive): no pol gamma less mtDNA made mental
deterioration, seizure, blind, deaf, death
Leigh Syndrome: more severe form of NARP. Accumulated mutations over generations.
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NUCLEAR DISORDERS
Lamin A binds to :
o Architectural partners
o Chromatin partners
o Gene-regulatory partners
o Signalling partners
Spinal Muscular Atrophy: mutated SMN (in gems) can’t make snRNP right
can’tsplice lose motor neurons muscle atrophy
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ER/GOLGI DISORDERS
Angelman Syndrome: mutation chrom 15 for ubiquitin ligase (only maternal active, while
father’s is imprinted) can’t polyubiquinate stuff for degradation happy baby,
epilepsies, jerkiness.
Cystic Fibrosis: mutation in CTFR (Cl ion channel), class 2 mutation (Cl ion channel not
folded properly) rhonchi, crackles in lungs, bronchiectasis (find Cl- in sweat test)
Creutzfeld Jacob Disease: GPI-link’s alpha helix becomes beta sheet prion
accumulates shrink brain.
EXOCYTOSIS DISORDERS
Botulin Toxin: synaptobrevin cleaved Ach can’t fuse at NMJ flaccid paralysis
ENDOCYTOSIS DISORDERS
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Familial Hypercholesterolemia:
o I: can’t make LDL-R
o II: makes LDL-R, but can’t transfer to the plasma membrane
o III: LDL-R makes it to the plasma membrane, but LDL cannot bind to it.
o IV: LDL can bind to LDL-R, but it can’t cluster to form coated pits for vesicle
budding (because coated-pit binding site defective).
o V: You form vesicles, but the LDL-R’s cannot be recycled
LYSOSOME DISORDERS
CHF.
Pseudo-Hurler Polydystrophy (Mucolipidosis III): Milder I-Cell Disease, later onset
Hunter’s Syndrome: just like Hurler’s syndrome except missing iduronodate sulphatase
and NO CORNEAL CLOUDING and is X-LINKED!!!!
:
Sanfilippo syndrome (MPS III): like Hurler’s except kids live longer and severe behavior
problem
PEROXISOMAL DISORDERS
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Nucleic acid purines (A, G) = degraded to uric acid then urate by Xanthine oxidase
excreted
Gout: a lot of xanthine oxidase activity lotta purines converted to uric acid
(hyperurecemia) (too much uric acid) arthritis. Tx: Allopurinol (xanthine oxidase
inhibitor)
o Humans don’t have uric acid oxidase in our peroxisomes à eat too much purines
à Gout
Plasmalogens (made in peroxisome) are the most abundant phospholipids in myelin. The
products of VLCFA beta oxidation are used for biosynthesis of cholesterol, bile acids,
and other compounds.
Cholera Toxin: keeps Gs in active state too much cAMP made prolonged
stimulation too much Cl and Na transported across membrane water follows salt
diarrhea
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G-PROTEIN RECEPTORS
o Gs, Gi: effector = adenyl cyclase, 2nd messenger= cAMP , activates = PKA
o Gq: effector = PLC, 2nd messenger= DAG/IP3, activates = PKC
RTK RECEPTORS
o RTK - PLC: eff = PLC, 2nd = DAG/IP3, activates = PKC
o RTK – PI3K: eff = PI3K, 2nd = PIP2/3, activates PKB (i.e. AKT/PTEN)
(PI3K: PIP2àPIP3 whereas PTEN: PIP3àPIP2 )
(AKT is like PKB)
Insulin signalling uses the PI3K-PKB pathway à effect vesicles with Glut4
receptors to merge with PM
o RTK – GRB2-SOS-Ras-MapK-TF(Fos/Jun)-GF Pathway
NON-TK RECEPTORS
o Cytokine Receptors: 1st messenger= cytokine, Eff=JAK Phosph’d à STAT
Phosph’d àSTAT dimerized à transcription
o Integrin receptors: 1st messenger=collagen à Eff=ILK (integrin-linked kinase) or
FAK (focal adhesion kinase) àprolif, growth, differentiation, apoptosis
INTRACELLULAR RECEPTORS
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MICROTUBULES DISORDERS
MTOC = place where microtubules grow from… so find in migrating cells, mitotic cells,
nerve cells, base of cilia and flagella, etc.
o gamma-tubulin rings in MTOC "seed" sphere
o Basal bodies = MTOCs under cilia and flagella
Viruses can travel on dynein (+-) or kinesin(-+) to and fro cell body.
Varicella Zoster Virus: Virus in dorsal root ganglion travel via kinesin to end of nerves
at skin. “Chicken Pox”, “Shingles”
Rabies: Virus can travel from wound via dynein to CNSencephalitis prodromal
phase (headache, malaise)neuro phase (delirium)coma death (respiratory failure)
Familial Motor Neuron Disease (MND): mutation in Dynactin subunit lower motor
neurons (musc atrophy, weakness), or upper motor neuron (hyperreflexia)
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Primary Cilia Dyskinesia: Lack/Defective inner dynein arm Immobile cilia sperm
can’t swim, fallopian tube can’t carry ovum, and you get bronchitis, otitis media, and
sinusitis. Kartagener Syndrome
TX:
o Colchicine: inhibit polymerization of MT Cell Death. Treat Gout
o Vincristine/Vinblastine: inhibit polymerization of MT Cell Death. Treat
cancers w/ high mitotic index
o Paclitaxel (Taxol): inhibit depolymerization blocks mitosis Cell Death.
Treat breast, prostate, lung cancer. ODDBALL (only one that inhibits
depolymerization).
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ACTIN DISORDERS
MT vs Actin
o MT: + end = grow; - end = breakdown
o Actin: + end = fast grow; - end = slow grow
“Seeds”
o MT seed: tubulin gamma
o Seed for branched actin: ARP (actin-related protein) (- end)
o Seed for unbranched actin: Formin (+ end)
Profilin exchanges ADP for ATP on the G-actin, making it ready for polymerization.
TYPES OF ARFs!!
o ARFs that bind to G-actin
Thymosin: binds G-actinà prevents F-actin assembly (“thanatopsis”)
Profilin: Binds G-actin à promotes F-actin assembly (“promotes
filament”)
o ARFs that bind to F-actin
Cofilin: disassemble at – end (disassemble) (“cuts filament”)
Gelsolin: caps + end (prevent further growth) (“gel sol cap”)
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Stress fibers (remember they are contractile, so they are crosslinked by alpha-actinin)
connect to ECM via focal adhesions (integrin). Remember they are used in cell signaling
(collagen effect integrin àeffect ILK or FAK à proliferation)
Myosin:
o I has I head + calmodulin (“I” looks like a microvilli)
o II has II heads + essential + regulatory – II looks like squeezing (contractile)
o V has 2 heads + calmodulin (V for Vesicle!)
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MUSCULAR DISORDERS
Satellite Cell (in basal lamina of mature muscle) à myoblast à +myotube +myofibers à
mature muscle
Stem Cell “Side Population Cells” (in bone marrow) à differentiate into satellite cells
Muscular Dystrophy à repair cannot keep up with damage à connective tissue + fat
accumulation. Detect w/ blood test – find increased serum creatine kinase. Or do PCR
deletion screening.
Dystrophin = largest gene therefore prone to many mutations. Binds actin cytoskeleton to
sarcoglycan-dystroglycan complex.
X-LINKED MUSCULAR DYSTROPHIES:
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Treatment of DMD:
o Inject donor myoblast? Difficult because muscle cells don’t divide, so need to
inject a lot.
o Step Cell Therapy – either upregulate utrophin (homologous to dystrophin but in
fetus), or inject stem cells that would differentiate into myoblasts, or exon-
skipping
Marfan’s Syndrome: remember fibrillin binds elastin. Fibrillin defect weak elastic
tissue arachnodactyly (“spider fingers”), funnel chest, retinal detachment, aortic root
dilation.
Matrix Metalloproteinases
o MMP I = Collagenase I (so breaks down collagen I)
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o MMP II = Collagenase IV (so breaks down collagen IV, used by cell to invade
basal lamina, as well as chemotaxis)
Hyaluronan is a type of “space filler – produced during wound healing, which need a lot
of cell-free space for repair cells to migrate. Its length is humongous – to create space
filler! It is not covalently linked to core protein so it is not compact.
After growth factor binds to Perlecan or Syndecan (heparan sulfate), it has a better and
more convenient binding access to receptor on cell surface
Cross-Links
o Collagen 6 cross-links Collagen 1
o Collagen 9 cross-links Collagen 2
o Fibrillin cross-links elastin
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o Basal Lamina
Plasma membrane is weak, so need strong matrix on each side, hence ECM on the
outside of the cell membrane and actin matrix on the inside.
Fibronectin: 2 forms:
o Soluble = for blood coagulation
o Insoluble = for the “paste” that guide cell migration and growth (w/ alignment)
Remember Vinculin is a focal adhesion (“foot hold”) protein, on the cytosolic side of the
cell – connect actin filament of stress fibers to ECM
Integrin is the telephone between ECM and Cell, but they’re also the connection. So if
signals tell them to cluster, they will adhese the cell more and cause anchorage-dependent
growth. The reverse will cause cell motility.
Remember glycoprotein IIb and IIIa in Glanzmann’s Thrombasthenia? They are platelet
integrins!!(β3)
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Old actin filaments are disassembled in back, and new ones are created in front à
crawling of cell. Contraction at back propels cell body forward.
Chemotaxis:
o It’s interesting how the MMP and TIMPs are stored in ECM (Basal Lamina), as if
ECM has the keys to its own doors to allow cell to enter.
o Remember MMP is collagenase. MMPI digests Collagen I, MMPII digests
Collagen IV (basal lamina)
Cell Junctions:
o Tight Jxns Occlude
o Adherens and Desmosomes anchor
o Gap junctions communicate
TADG = from apex to base = tight jxn adherens jxn desmosomes gap jxn
T vs A vs D vs G
o Tight Junction: Claudin/Occludin – ZO – actin
o Adherins: Cadherin - catenin/alpha actinin – actin
o Desmosomes: Cadherins (desmoglein/desmocollin) – Plakoglobin/Desmoplakin -
intermediate filaments
o Gap Junctions: 1000s channels = 2 connexons = 6 connexins
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So both desmosome and hemidesmosome have “plaques” (Have parts of it named plec-
something or plak-something)
You can tell which side of the cell is which by looking at where the zonula occludens is.
Paracellular pathway = passage of free molecules between the cells. Zonula occludens is
the door to this pathway.
Gap Junction:
o Eletrical: Peristalsis, Coordinated depolarization of heart muscles, uterine
contraction
o Chemical: cAMP passes between cells so can respond the same way to a hormone
High Calcium level (from damaged cell) à closes gap junction, to prevent damage.
Connexins
o Connexin 26 Mutation (in cochlea): deafness
o Connexin 50 Mutation (in lens): cataracts blindness
o Connexin 32 Mutation (in peripheral myelin): Chargot-Marie-Tooth
degeneration of peripheral nerves atrophy of distant muscles, decreased deep
tendon reflex, “foot drop,” “high-stepping gait,” “high-arched foot,” “hammer
toes” (really mean nicknames for CMT!)
Selectins:
o L-Selectin for leukocyte – for lymphocyte homing (addressins on lymphocytes
attach to the L-selectins on lymphoid organs, homing)
o P-Selectin for platelet
o E-Selectin for endothelial cell – leukocyte can “roll” on the E-selectin in the
bloodstream.
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COLLAGEN DISORDERS
Collagen Structure:
o 3 residues/turn, L hand helix
o 3 stranded helix, R hand helix
PXG repeats:
o Proline (P) – remember that it is bulky from Block 1?
o Hydroxyproline (X) – remember hydroxylated proline from Block 2?
o Glycine – connects all 3 strands with each other via H-bonding.
MAKING A COLLAGEN:
1. Make 2 a1 & 1 a2 chains + signal peptide (preprocollagen)
2. Cleave signal peptide (procollagen)
3. Hydroxylate proline and lysine (via Vitamin C)
4. Glycosylate hydroxylysine
5. Disulfide bond aligns chain and initiates triple helix formation from CàN
6. H bonds form between hydroxyproline of procollagens.
7. Procollagen Peptidase removes Propeptides on both C and N end.
Scurvy: Lack Vitamin C can’t hydroxylate proline can’t H bond can’t form
collagen weak connective tissue bleeding gums, nails, loose teeth, fatigue, etc.
Remember:
o Collagen I = skin/bone/tendon
o Collagen II = Cartilage
o Collagen III = blood vessels, fetal skin
o Collagen IV (sheet-forming) = Basal Lamina
o Collagen VII = Anchoring
collagen.
Epidermolysis Bullosa:
o Simplex: mutation in Keratin 5 and 14
o Junctional: mutation in laminin, integrins, hemidesmosomal proteins (@
junction)
o Dystrophic: mutation in Collagen VII (anchoring of hemidesmosomes to basal
lamina). “boy whose skin fell off”
Other Collagenopathies:
o Achondrogenesis type II
o Kniest dysplasia – dwarf, enlarged joints
o Spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia
o Stickler syndrome - underdeveloped facial bones
o Campomelic Dysplasia – Mutation in SOX9 decrease Collagen II
o Thanatophoric Dysplasia – born dead. FGFR3 mutation, like achondroplasia
o Hypochondroplasia – also FGFR3 mutation, like achondroplasia
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