For every cell, there is a time to live and a time to die.
There are two ways in which cells die:
- They are killed by injurious agents.
- They are induced to commit suicide.
Cells that are damaged by
injury, such as by
- mechanical damage
- exposure to toxic chemicals
undergo a characteristic series of
changes:
- They (and their organelles like mitochondria)
swell (because the ability of the plasma membrane to control the passage of
ions and water is disrupted).
- The cell contents leak out, leading to
- inflammation
of surrounding tissues.
Cells that are induced to
commit suicide:
- shrink;
- develop bubble-like blebs on their surface;
- have the chromatin
(DNA and protein) in their nucleus degraded;
- have their mitochondria break down with the release of cytochrome
c;
- break into small, membrane-wrapped, fragments.
- The phospholipid
phosphatidylserine, which is normally hidden within the plasma membrane, is
exposed on the surface.
- This is bound by receptors on phagocytic
cells like macrophages
and dendritic
cells which then engulf the cell fragments.
- The phagocytic cells secrete cytokines
that inhibit inflammation
(e.g., IL-10
and TGF-β)
The pattern of events in death by suicide is so orderly that the process is
often called programmed cell death or PCD. The cellular machinery
of programmed cell death turns out to be as intrinsic to the cell as, say, mitosis.
Programmed cell death is also called apoptosis. (There is no consensus
yet on how to pronounce it; some say APE oh TOE sis; some say
uh POP tuh sis.)
There are two different reasons.
Examples:
- The resorption of the tadpole tail at the time of its metamorphosis into a
frog occurs by apoptosis.
- The formation of the fingers and toes of the fetus requires the removal,
by apoptosis, of the tissue between them.
- The sloughing off of the inner lining of the uterus (the endometrium) at
the start of menstruation
occurs by apoptosis.
- The formation of the proper connections (synapses)
between neurons in the brain requires that surplus cells be eliminated by
apoptosis
Examples:
- Cells infected with viruses
- One of the methods by which cytotoxic
T lymphocytes (CTLs) kill virus-infected cells is by inducing
apoptosis . (And some viruses mount countermeasures to thwart it)
- Cells of the immune system
- As cell-mediated
immune responses wane, the effector cells must be removed to prevent them
from attacking body constituents. CTLs induce apoptosis in each other and even
in themselves. Defects in the apoptotic machinery is associated with autoimmune
diseases such as lupus
erythematosus and rheumatoid
arthritis.
- Cells with DNA damage
- Damage to its genome can cause a cell
- to disrupt proper embryonic development leading to birth defects
- to become cancerous.
Cells respond to DNA damage by increasing
their production of p53.
p53 is a potent inducer of apoptosis. Is it any wonder that mutations
in the p53 gene, producing a defective protein, are so often found in
cancer cells (that represent a lethal threat to the organism if permitted to
live)?
- Cancer cells
- Radiation and chemicals used in cancer therapy induce apoptosis in some
types of cancer cells.
-
The balance between:
- the withdrawal of positive signals; that is, signals needed for continued
survival, and
- the receipt of negative signals.
The continued survival of most cells requires that they receive
continuous stimulation from other cells and, for many, continued adhesion to the
surface on which they are growing. Some examples of positive signals:
- growth factors for neurons
- Interleukin-2 (IL-2),
an essential factor for the mitosis of lymphocytes
Receipt of negative signals
- increased levels of oxidants within the cell
- damage to DNA by these oxidants or other agents like
- ultraviolet
light
- x-rays
- chemotherapeutic
drugs
- accumulation of proteins that failed to fold properly into their proper tertiary
structure
- molecules that bind to specific receptors on the cell surface and signal
the cell to begin the apoptosis program. These death activators
include:
- Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α ) that binds to the
TNF
receptor;
- Lymphotoxin (also known as TNF-β ) that also binds to the TNF
receptor;
- Fas ligand (FasL), a molecule that binds to a cell-surface
receptor named Fas (also called CD95).
There are 3 different mechanisms by which a cell commits
suicide by apoptosis.
- One generated by signals arising within the cell;
- another
triggered by death activators binding to receptors at the cell surface:
- TNF-α
- Lymphotoxin
- Fas ligand (FasL)
- A third
that may be triggered by dangerous reactive
oxygen species.
1. Apoptosis triggered by internal signals: the intrinsic
or mitochondrial pathway
- In a healthy cell, the outer membranes of its mitochondria display the
protein Bcl-2
on their surface.
- Internal damage to the cell (e.g., from reactive
oxygen species) causes
- Bcl-2 to activate a related protein, Bax, which punches holes in
the outer mitochondrial membrane, causing
- cytochrome
c to leak out.
- The released cytochrome c binds to the protein Apaf-1 ("apoptotic
protease activating factor-1").
- Using the energy provided by ATP,
- these complexes aggregate to form apoptosomes.
- The apoptosomes bind to and activate caspase-9.
- Caspase-9 is one of a family of over a dozen caspases. They are all proteases.
They get their name because they cleave proteins — mostly each other — at
aspartic acid (Asp)
residues).
- Caspase-9 cleaves and, in so doing, activates other caspases (caspase-3
and -7).
- The activation of these "executioner" caspases creates an expanding
cascade of proteolytic activity (rather like that in blood
clotting and complement
activation) which leads to
- digestion of structural proteins in the cytoplasm,
- degradation of chromosomal DNA, and
- phagocytosis of the cell.
- Fas and the TNF receptor are integral
membrane proteins with their receptor domains exposed at the surface of
the cell
- binding of the complementary death activator (FasL and
TNF respectively) transmits a signal to the cytoplasm that leads to
- activation of caspase 8
- caspase 8 (like caspase 9) initiates a cascade of caspase activation
leading to
- phagocytosis of the cell.
Example (right): When cytotoxic
T cells recognize (bind to) their target,
- they produce more FasL at their surface.
- This binds with the Fas on the surface of the target cell leading
to its death by apoptosis.
The early steps in apoptosis are reversible — at least in C.
elegans. In some cases, final destruction of the cell is guaranteed only
with its engulfment by a phagocyte.
Neurons, and perhaps other cells, have another way to self-destruct that —
unlike the two paths described above — does not use caspases.
Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) is a protein that is normally located
in the intermembrane
space of mitochondria. When the cell receives a signal telling it that it is
time to die, AIF
- is released from the mitochondria (like the release of cytochrome c in the
first
pathway);
- migrates into the nucleus;
- binds to DNA, which
- triggers the destruction of the DNA and cell death.
Apoptosis and Cancer
Some viruses associated with
cancers use tricks to prevent apoptosis of the cells they have transformed.
- Several human
papilloma viruses (HPV) have been implicated in causing
cervical cancer. One of them produces a protein (E6)
that binds and inactivates the apoptosis promoter p53.
- Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV), the cause of mononucleosis and
associated with some lymphomas
- produces a protein similar to Bcl-2
- produces another protein that causes the cell to increase its own
production of Bcl-2. Both these actions make the cell more resistant to
apoptosis (thus enabling a cancer cell to continue to
proliferate).
Even cancer cells produced without the
participation of viruses may have tricks to avoid apoptosis.
- Some B-cell leukemias and lymphomas express high levels of
Bcl-2, thus blocking apoptotic signals they may receive. The high
levels result from a translocation of the BCL-2 gene into an
enhancer region for antibody production.
- Melanoma (the most dangerous type of skin cancer) cells avoid
apoptosis by inhibiting the expression of the gene encoding Apaf-1.
- Some cancer cells, especially lung and colon cancer cells, secrete
elevated levels of a soluble "decoy" molecule that binds to FasL, plugging it
up so it cannot bind Fas. Thus, cytotoxic T cells (CTL) cannot kill the cancer
cells by the mechanism
shown above.
- Other cancer cells express high levels of FasL, and can kill any
cytotoxic T cells (CTL) that try to kill them because CTL also express Fas
(but are protected from their own FasL).
The immune response to a foreign invader involves the proliferation of
lymphocytes — T and/or B cells .
When their job is done, they must be removed leaving only a small population of
memory cells .
This is done by apoptosis.
Very rarely humans are encountered with genetic defects in apoptosis. The
most common one is a mutation in the gene for Fas, but mutations in the gene for
FasL or even one of the caspases are occasionally seen. In all cases, the
genetic problem produces autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome or ALPS.
Features:
- an accumulation of lymphocytes in the lymph nodes and spleen greatly
enlarging them.
- the appearance of clones that are autoreactive; that is, attack "self"
components producing such autoimmune disorders as
- hemolytic anemia
- thrombocytopenia
- the appearance of lymphoma — a cancerous clone of lymphocytes.
In most patients with ALPS, the mutation is present in the germline;
that is, every cell in their body carries it. In a few cases, however, the
mutation is somatic;
that is, has occurred in a precursor cell in the bone marrow. These later
patients are genetic
mosaics — with some lymphocytes that undergo apoptosis normally and others
that do not. The latter tend to out-compete the former and grow to become the
major population in the lymph nodes and blood.
Apoptosis and AIDS
The hallmark of AIDS
(acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) is the decline in the number of the
patient's CD4+
T cells (normally about 1000 per microliter (µl) of blood).
CD4+ T cells are responsible, directly or indirectly (as ), for all immune responses. When their number declines below about 200
per µl, the patient is no longer able to mount effective immune responses and
begins to suffer a series of dangerous infections.
What causes the disappearance of CD4+ T cells?
HIV
(human immunodeficiency virus) invades CD4+ T cells, and one
might assume that it this infection by HIV that causes the great
dying-off of these cells. However, that appears not to the main culprit.
Fewer than 1 in 100,000 CD4+ T cells in the blood of AIDS patients
are actually infected with the virus.
So what kills so many uninfected CD4+ cells?
The answer is clear: apoptosis.
The mechanism is not clear. There are
several possibilities. One of them:
- All T cells, both infected and uninfected, express Fas.
- Expression of a HIV gene (called Nef) in a HIV-infected cell
causes
- the cell to express high levels of FasL at its surface
- while preventing an interaction with its own Fas from causing it to
self-destruct.
- However, when the infected T cell encounters an uninfected one (e.g. in a
lymph node), the interaction of FasL with Fas on the uninfected
cell kills it by apoptosis.
For many years
it has been known that certain parts of the body such as
- the anterior
chamber of the eye
- the testes
are
"immunologically privileged sites". Antigens within these sites fail to elicit
an immune response.
It turns out that cells in these sites differ from the other cells of the
body in that they express high levels of FasL at all times. Thus
antigen-reactive T cells, which express Fas, would be killed when they
enter these sites. (This is the reverse of the mechanism
described above.)
This finding raises the possibility of a new way of
preventing graft
rejection.
If at least some of the cells on a transplanted kidney, liver, heart, etc.
could be made to express high levels of FasL, that might protect the graft from
attack by the T cells of the host's cell-mediated
immune system. If so, then the present need for treatment with immunosuppressive
drugs for the rest of the transplant recipient's life would be reduced or
eliminated.
So far, the results in animal experiments have been mixed. Allografts
engineered to express FasL have shown increased survival for kidneys but not for
hearts or islets
of Langerhans.
Plant, too, can turn on a system of programmed cell death; for example, in an
attempt to halt the spread of virus infection.
The mechanism differs from that in animals although it, too, involves a
protease that — like caspases — cleaves other proteins at Asp
(and Asn)
residues.
Activation of this enzyme destroys the central
vacuole, which is followed by disintegration of the rest of the cell.