Histopathlogy General Concept Part 1
Histopathlogy General Concept Part 1
Histopathlogy General Concept Part 1
• Etiology : cause
• Pathogenesis : mechanism
• Morphologic changes : structural alterations
• Clinical manifestations:
functional consequences
Sign
• Objective observation that can be seen or measured (high blood pressure,
fever)
Symptom
• Subjective report that can be perceived only by the person affected
(headache, nausea)
DEFINITION OF TERMS
Disease
• Specific set of signs and symptoms seen together frequently and become the
basis for diagnosis
Disorder
• Disruption of the disease to the normal or regular functions in the body
Syndrome
• Disease or disorder that has more than one identifying feature or symptoms
The cell
• Fundamental, functional unit of life that makes up all
living organisms and the tissues of the body
• Rudolf Virchow (1821 - 1902)
• father of modern pathology
• proposed that injury to the smallest living unit
of the body, the cell, is the basis of all disease
GENOME
• Human genome contain roughly 3.2 billion DNA base pairs,
only 1.5% (20,000) of which code for proteins (coding genes),
remaining are non-coding genes
• This coding genome is similar across species, and the
diversity lies in the non-coding genome
• As the complexity of organism increases so does the
proportion of non-coding genome
GENE VS GENOME
EXONS: EXPRESSED, CODING REGIONS
INTRONS: INTERRUPTED, NON-CODING REGIONS
POLYMORPHISM/GENETIC
VARIATIONS
🠶 ANY TWO INDIVIDUALS – 99.5%
🠶 HUMAN AND CHIMPS – 99%
🠶 HUMAN AND CAT – 90%
🠶 HUMAN AND CHICKEN – 60%
Oxygen
Carbondioxide
Steroid based –
estradiol, Vit D
Water
Ethanol
Urea
transferrin and
low-density
lipoprotein
(LDL)
UPTAKE OF MACROMOLECULES
• Exocytosis: large molecule exported out of cell
• Transcytosis: movement of endocytosed vesicle between the apical
and basolater compartments
• Endocytosis: uptake of fluid or large molecules
• 1. Caveolea-mediated: use of caveolin for smaller molecules (vitamin A)
: potocytosis- cellular sipping
• 2. Receptor mediated: use of clarithrin-mediated pits for larger molecules (LDL, iron)
: pinocytosis- cellular drinking
2. Cytoskeleton
Roles:
- Ability of cells to adapt to a
particular shape
- Maintain polarity
- Organize relationship of
intracellular organelles
- Cellular movement
2. Cytoskeleton
3 MAJOR CLASSES
• ACTIN MICROFILAMENTS
• Most abundant
• Maintains shape and
movement
• INTERMEDIATE FILAMENTS
• Rope-like
• Use for tensile strength,
bear mechanical stress
• Major protein in hair and
skin
• MICROTUBULES
• Moves vesicles, organelles
or other molecules
• Motile cilia or flagella
• microvilli
Intermediate filaments
• Laminin- nuclear lamina of cells
• Vimentin- mesenchymal cells (fibroblasts and endothelium)
• Desmin- muscle cells
• Neurofilaments- axons of neurons
• Glial Fibrillary Acidic Proteins- glial cells (astrocytes, microglia, oligodendrocytes)
• Cytokeratins: Epithelial cells
CK immunostain DESMIN immunostain
CELL TO CELL INTERACTION
• OCCLUDING (TIGHT) JUNCTION
• Seal adjacent cells, continuous barrier
• ANCHORING JUNCTIONS
(DESMOSOMES)
• Attach cells to another cell
• Attachment between cell and cell matrix
• Spot desmosome or macula densa- cell to cell
• Hemidesmosome- cell to ECM/basement
membrane
• Belt desmosome- cell to cell
• COMMUNICATING (GAP) JUNCTIONS
• Passage of chemical or electrical signals
• Pores: CONNEXONS
3. ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM
• site for synthesis of all the transmembrane proteins and lipids
for plasma membrane and cellular organelles
• initial site for the synthesis of all molecules destined for export
out of the cell
4. GOLGI APPARATUS
• Prominent in goblet cells,
bronchial epithelium,
plasma cells
5. LYSOSOMES AND PROTEOSOMES
LYSOSOMES
• 40 different acid hydrolases
• Proteases, nucleases, lipases, glycosidases,
phosphatases, sulfatases
PROTEOSOMES
• Digest proteins tagged with ubiquitin
5. LYSOSOMES AND PROTEOSOMES
PROTEASOMES