Histology: Cytoskeleton
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| What are the three major components of the cytoskeleton? | actin filaments (microfilaments), intermediate filaments and microtubules
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| What is the function of the cytoskeleton? | maintains cell shape and support, provides the mechanisms for cell movement, acts as tracks for motor proteins that help move materials within cells
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| Describe actin filaments | F-actin that is ATP dependent. 7nm. Polarized:fast growing + and slow growing -
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| Functions of microfilaments | anchorage, structural core of microvilli, locomotion, extension of cell processes
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| Describe microvilli | cyclindrical, membrane-bound cytoplasmic projections of a core 25-30 actin microfilaments. The actin is crosslinked by villin anchored to the terminal web.
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| Describe Intermediate filaments | 8-12nm, rope-like, formed from non-polar and variable subunits
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| Functions of intermediate filaments | stabilize cell structure: maintain nuc and organelle position, resist shearing force:connects with desmosomes and hemidesmosomes across the cytoplasm, essential for integrity of cell-cell and cell-ECM junctions
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| What are the 4 intermediate filaments? | keratins, vimentin & vimentin-like, neurofilaments, lamins
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| Describe keratins | diverse group with >50 isoforms, found in different cells of epithelial origin
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| Describe vimentin | most abundant in mesoderm-derived cells
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| Describe vimentin-like | desmin in muscle cells, glial fibrillary protein in glial cells and astrocytes, peripherin in neurons
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| Describe neurofilaments | formed from a group of neurofilament triplet proteins, extend from cell body into the ends of axons and dendrites, provide structural support
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| Describe lamins | associated with nuc envelope, Lamin A & B, found in nucleoplasm
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| Describe the stucture of a centriole | 9 triplets of microtubules arranged around a central axis. Each triplet consists of 1 complete and 2 incomplete microtubules fused
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| Function of centriole | organizes the centrosome, provide basal bodies necessary for assembly of cilia and flagella, formation of centrosome & alignment of the mitotic spindle during cell division
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| What is the structure of the centrosome/MTOC? | pair of centrioles perpendicular to each other with an amorphous protein matrix and gamma-tubulin ring complexes where microtubules grow from
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| Function of MTOC? | initiate microtubule formation: positive ends point out and grow toward the cell periphery
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| Structure of microtubules? | non-branching, rigid, hollow tubes made up of alpha and beta tubulin subunits with a positive and negative end
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| Which cytoskeletal component is "dynamic"? | microtubules because the assemble and disassemble as the needs of the cell change
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| Functions of microtubules | intracellular transport, cell motility, mitotic spindle, rigid intracellular skeleton to main cell shape and polarity
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| Describe the polymerization of microtubules | directed by MTOCs, dependent on GTP, can be highly dynamic or relatively stable, fast grow at positive end and slow growth/disassembly at negative end
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| controller of microtubule lenght | environment and microtubule associated proteins
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| Function of cilia | move fluid and particles along epithelial surfaces
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| How are cilia anchored to the cell? | basal body
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| What are primary cilia? | antennae-like structures, 9+0, develops from one centriole following division
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| What sensory organelles are derived from primary cilia? | outer segment of rods, chemoreceptors in olfactory neurons, mechanoreceptors on epithelial cells of kidney to monitor fluid flow.
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| What defect arises from polycystic kidney disease? | primary cilia defect
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| What is part of the actin based molecular motor family? | myosin
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| What is part of the microtuble based molecular motor family? | kinesin, dynein
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| Structure of myosin II? | 2 heavy chains and 4 light chains, tail-tail interactions result in the formation of bipolar thick filaments, head binds and hydrolyzes ATP
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| Describe the kinesin family of molecular motors | positive end directed motors, binding sits for vesicles, organells or other microtubule, ~40 kinesins in humans
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| Describe the dynein family | negative end directed motors, binding sites for vesicles, organelles and another microtubule, largest and fastest
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| What are the two branches of dynein | cytoplasmic and axonemal
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| What are the 3 steps of cell motility? | protrusion, attachement, contraction
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| Describe protrusion | actin-rich structures pushed out at the front of the cell
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| Describe attachment | actin cytoskeleton connects across PM to substratum
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| Describe contraction | bulk of the trailing cell cytoplasm in drawn forward
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| What are the 3 different types of protusion | filopodia, lamellipodia, pseudopodia
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| Describe filopodia | 1 dimen., core o long, bundled actin filaments ex. fibroblasts
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| Describe lamellipodia and examples | 2 dimens. sheet like structures, ex. fibroblasts, epithelial cells, neurons
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| Describe pseudopodia | 3 dimensional projections, ex. neutrophils
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| Desribe in detail PM protrusion | actin polymerization: actin filaments oriented with plus end forward and minus end attached to sides of other actin by ARP complexes, treadmilling: assemble at front, disassembling at rear
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| What proteins are involved in cell motility? | monomeric GTPases, Rho, Rac, Cdc24
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| Function of Rho | bundling of actin filaments with myosin II, clustering of integrins to form focal contacts
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| Function of Rac | actin polymerization at periphery
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| Function of Cdc24 | actin polymerization and bundling to form filopodia/microspikes
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| What are the three methods of neutrophil migration | neutrophil extravasation, transmigration, chemotaxis
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| Describe neutrophil extravasation | movement from blood to tissues through blood vessels. EC selectin receptors bind neutrophils
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| Describe transmigration | diapedesis: extension of a pseudopod between endothelial cells.
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Created by:
mnoronha
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