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wound repair
cmbm exam IV
139
Chemistry
Graduate
01/25/2010

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Term
what are the 3 participants in tissue creation? who are the main participants?
Definition
cells, matrix, and cytokines. cells are the main participants
Term
what are the characteristics of cells in the process of wound repair?
Definition
cells are the workers, sythesizing extracellular matrix and affecting its creation, they are regulated by cytokines, they also synthesize and release cytokines, cells also degrade cytokines
Term
what are the characteristics of the matrix in the process of wound repair?
Definition
the matrix can be degraded and form agents that affect cells
Term
what are the characteristics of cytokines in the process of wound repair?
Definition
these are proteins which control cell communication, and affect cells significantly
Term
what happens if wound healing doesn't take place?
Definition
non-healing ulcerative wounds result
Term
what is the sequence of the wound healing process?
Definition
blood vessel injury -> thrombus formation -> inflammation reaction -> cellular invasion -> tissue repair
Term
what is critical to the process of wound healing?
Definition
timing, (it is "orchestrated")
Term
what lasts longer than the open wound?
Definition
biochemical processes last longer than the open wound, the wound may close in a few days but wound healing is a long process (can last several years esp with collagen reformation)
Term
what are the over-lapping phages of wound healing?
Definition
inflammation -> granulation stage -> acute inflammation -> collagen accumuation and remodeling
Term
is inflammation hemostatic? what does it involve?
Definition
yes and it involves blood coagulation, which is essential b/c when blood clots it forms platelets (which secrete a number of important cytokines which regulated the process of healing)
Term
what are the 4 steps involved in the inflammation/hemostatic stage of wound healing?
Definition
platelet aggregation, cytokine secretion from platelets, platelet clot formation, and fibrin clot formation
Term
after platelets aggregate, what are the cytokines secreted from platelets? what do they affect?
Definition
PGDF, EGF, TGFb, IL1, LTB4 that directly attract neutrophils chemostatically, who can then start the inflammation process
Term
after the formation of the platelet clots, how does the fibrin clot form? what is the fibrin clot?
Definition
the fibrin clot is a hemodynatic seal that prevents blood loss and contributes to the inflammation state.
Term
what does factor XIII do? how important is this process? does factor XIII crosslink fibrin with other adhesive proteins?
Definition
factor XIII crosslinks fibrin, an important process for wound healing -> a deficiency in factor XIII and closed wounds open back up. factor XIII does crosslink fibrin with other adhesive proteins such as fibronectin
Term
what is fibronectin? what does it do? what happens if fibronectin doesn't do it's job?
Definition
an important adhesive protein that plays an essential role in wound healing. fibronectin cross links with fibrin which helps direct cells in a certain direction during the healing process. if this doesn’t occur the wound healing process is chaotic and weak
Term
what else acts like fibronectin?
Definition
thrombospondin
Term
what do alpha-macroglobin and alpha-anti plasmin inhibit?
Definition
proteolysis, essentially allow crosslinking to be continue -> endow thrombus with protection against excessive degradation
Term
what are the two levels of the coagulation and hemostasis phase?
Definition
platelet action and thrombus formation, (the chemostatic phase)
Term
what are the cytokines secreted by platelets? what do they do?
Definition
platelet derived growth factor (PGDF), epithermal growth factor (EGF), interleukin-1 (IL-1), transformin growth factor beta (TGH-beta), leukotriene D-4 (LTD-4). these all directly affect neutrophils by attracting them through a chemostatic process that starts inflammation
Term
what is the thrombus composed of? what does this component get degraded into?
Definition
the thrombus is composed of fibrin, which is degraded into fibrinopeptide A + B, which are released upon conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin (by thrombin). these are chemoattractants for neutrophils
Term
what does FDB stand for?
Definition
fibrin degradation products, which are formed with fibrin is degraded proteolytically, (mostly by plasmin), which is chemotactic for neutrophils
Term
what very important phase starts wound healing?
Definition
the chemostatic phase
Term
what is an important substrate for starting the inflammation stage?
Definition
arachidonic acid
Term
how is thrombin instrumental in the release/production of arachidonic acid?
Definition
thrombin activates phopholipase A2 which cleaves fatty acid from the #2 position of glycerol, (a phospholipid). these fatty acids are usually unsaturated, and in membrane lipids, the fatty acid is arachidonic acid
Term
what happens to arachidonic acid once cleaved from glycerol by phopholipase A2?
Definition
either lipoxygenase makes it into leukotrienes (such as LTD-4 which activates neutrophils) or cyclooxygenase converts it into prostaglandins which cause pain and are components of inflammation, (specifically PGE2).
Term
where does pain mostly come from?
Definition
bradykinin, from the kinin system
Term
how do you get the heat, redness, pain and swelling that is involved in inflammation?
Definition
the coagulation system needs to induce inflammation
Term
what is necessary for wound healing and must be resolved in 2 days?
Definition
acute inflammation
Term
is the thrombus, (fibrin clot), wet or dry? what viable cells does it contain?
Definition
wet, platelets, chemoattracted neutrophils, macrophages to engulf and phagocytize debris
Term
what cells move very early in the wound healing process?
Definition
epidermal cells to form a new epidermis on the surface of viable tissue, (not the scab)
Term
what are 2 important cytokines secreted by platelets?
Definition
transformin growth factor beta/TFG-beta, (forms 1,2,3), and platelet derived growth factor/PDGF, (AB, BB, AA)
Term
what cytokines are secreted by neutrophils?
Definition
TFG and PGDF
Term
what cytokines are involved in formation of new blood vessels? how do the epithelim and fibrblasts communicate?
Definition
vascular endothelial growth factor, (VEGF), and fibroblast growth factor, (FGF). the epithelium sends cytokines to fibroblasts, in response fibroblasts send a different cytokine which acts on epithelial cells, (time and conc. dependent)
Term
what is the function of inflammation mediated by?
Definition
neutrophils
Term
what is the primary function on neutrophils? how are they attracted to microbes?
Definition
to fight infection. they are attracted to microbes by N-formyl peptides, particularly N-formyl methionine, which is usually present on most bacterial species
Term
what is an initial janitorial function provided by neutrophils?
Definition
neutrophils remove insoluble matrix present in the inflammatory response
Term
what is an initial janitorial function provided by macrophages?
Definition
macrophages engulf remnants of dead bacteria and dead tissue to clean the wound
Term
what are janitorial functions of neutrophils and macrophages regulated by?
Definition
cytokines, (small proteins - 20,000 kda which are short lived and degraded quickly)
Term
what is the characteristic property of cytokines?
Definition
they have receptors on cells, and after binding, there is a cascade of signal conduction intracellular which mediates the response
Term
what does PGDF help do?
Definition
platelet derived growth factor helps cytokines have different effects on the same cell depending on the conditions
Term
why does plasma not promote cell growth in petri dishes, but serum does?
Definition
serum still contains platelet derived growth factor(PGDF), which has been anti-coagulated in plasma.
Term
do only platelets make PGDF?
Definition
cells other than platelets also synthesize PGDF, the name is a historical reference
Term
what are the 2 genes that PDGF has? what most it do in order to be active?
Definition
PGDF is a cytokine that has 2 genes: A and B which synthesize PGDFA or PGDFB and in order to be active, and PGDF must dimerize
Term
what are PGDFA and PGDF B? how are they connected?
Definition
parts of the PGDF dimer, held together by disulfide bonds, (covalent bonding)
Term
what does the dimerized PDGF do when it bind to its receptor?
Definition
dimerizes the receptor
Term
what are the parts of PDGF's receptor, and what parts of dimerized PDGF bind to?
Definition
the dimerized receptor has alpha and beta parts. PGDF A binds to the to alpha-receptor and PGDF B binds to the beta receptor
Term
how does the structure of PDGF lead to its differing effect on cells?
Definition
PGDF A-A, PGDF A-B, and PGDF B,B all have different effects on cells, (PGDF B-B is mostly responsible for atherosclerotic changes, and PGDF A-A has a lesser effect on atherosclerosis)
Term
what is the structure of the PGDF extracellular receotor?
Definition
it has 5 Ig domains, 4 of which participate in the dimer formation part of the process and the 5th domain has not been resolved
Term
what is the structure of the intracellular part of the PGDF receptor?
Definition
it has 8 tyrosine residues which can be phosphorylated by protein kinase, which is a part of the intracellular receptor -> therefore it is called autophosphorylation. (also common in the insulin receptor)
Term
are the 8 tyrosine residues of the intracellular part of the PGDF receptor are phosphorylated 1 at a time?
Definition
yes
Term
what happens if tyrosine 785 is phosphorylated?
Definition
a binding site is created for the SH2 domain
Term
what does the SH2 domain do once it binds to the site created by phosphorylation of tyrosine 785?
Definition
SH2 gives the mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) the ability to bind to phosphotyrosine 785 and triggers a signal transduction cascade causing translocation of the kinase to nucleus to start mitosis of the cell -> cell proliferation
Term
what happens if tyrosine 490 is phosphorylated?
Definition
a binding site is created for the SH2 domain
Term
what does the SH2 domain do once it binds to the site created by phosphorylation of tyrosine 490?
Definition
SH2 allows phosphoinositol triphosphate to bind to phosphotyrosine 490 which leads to movement of the cell through a series of events
Term
how can PDGF A-B induce different responses in the same cell?
Definition
the response to PDGF A-B depends on which tyrosine has been phosphorylated and thus what signal transduction cascade will be started
Term
what are cellular sources of PDGF?
Definition
platelets, monocytes, smooth muscle cells and macrophages.
Term
what does PDGF do in terms of fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells?
Definition
chemotaxis, proliferation and contraction of fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells, (in the granulation phase of wound healing)
Term
what does PDGF do in terms of neutrophils?
Definition
chemotaxis and activation of neutrophils
Term
why is PDGF important to the process of acute inflammation?
Definition
it triggers neutrophils, whose invasion of the site begins acute inflammation
Term
if PGDF is released by aggregated platelets, will the thrombus and scab will be affected?
Definition
yes
Term
what is PDGF a trigger of?
Definition
acute inflammation
Term
what does TGF-beta stand for? what are its cellular sources?
Definition
transforming growth factor beta. platelets, monocytes, fibroblasts, and smooth muscle cells
Term
what are the functions of TGF-beta?
Definition
it has the broadest range of functions in wound repair, including inhibitory effects on some cytokine-stimulated cells
Term
why can TGF-beta's actions be considered at times inconsequential? what does this depend on
Definition
its actions can be can be either stimulatory, inhibitory or an even process. this depends on concentration in some cases
Term
what does TGF-beta have an inhibitory effect on?
Definition
some cytokine-stimulated cells such as endothelial cells during blood vessel formation
Term
does TGF-alpha have similar functions to TGF-beta? what cell produces it?
Definition
no, (the name is historical), it is involved in re-epithelialization/proliferation. it is produced by macrophages.
Term
what does EGF stand for? what cell produces it? what is its function?
Definition
EGF stands for epidermal growth factor, it is produced by platelets and it effects reepithelialization
Term
when does reepithelialization take place in wound healing, either as dircted by TGF-alpha or EGF?
Definition
epithelial formation starts very early in the wound healing process when the cells line the boundary between viable undamaged tissue and the clot and scab that covers it.
Term
what does IL-1 do? what cells produce it?
Definition
interleukin-1 causes stimulation of immune response and induces inflammation. it is produced by platelets, lymphocytes, monocytes, and fibroblasts
Term
what does TNF-alpha do?
Definition
tumor necrosis factor alpha is responsible for inflammation and is produced by monocytes/macrophages
Term
what does FGF do? what cells produce it? when does its action appear in the overall process of wound healing?
Definition
fibroblast growth factor induces proliferation of fibroblasts and epidermal cells, it also promotes angiogenesis. it is produced by fibroblasts, macrophages and endothelial cells. its action takes place later in wound healing
Term
what is IGF? what cell produce it? when does its action take place?
Definition
insulin growth factor. it is produced by fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, and macrophages. it effects proliferation of various cells. its action is seen later in the wound healing process
Term
what does VEGF do? what cells make it? can it be considered autocrin?
Definition
vascular endothelial growth factor is made by endothelial cells and macrophages. it induces angiogenesis and increases permeability of blood vessels, (swelling part of inflammation-> blood plasma leaking out). in terms of its endothelial action, it is considered autocrine.
Term
what is KAF? what cells produce it? what does it do? what is it similar to?
Definition
keratinocyte growth factor. it is produced by epithelium/fibroblasts and induces proliferation of keratinocytes and reepithelialization, (like EGF)
Term
what happens before the inflammatory phase has been completed, (at its end)?
Definition
the re-synthesis of the extracellular matrix has already been started, debris has been removed and cell pattern has been changed
Term
during the formation of granulation tissue, is the clot dry?
Definition
yes, and it contains no cells
Term
what leaks from the fibroblasts and endothelial cells that leads to fibrin and other proteins being cleaves?
Definition
proteolytic enzymez such as urokinase plasminogen activators/tissue plasminogen activators which convert plasminogen to plasmin. plasmin then cleaves fibrin as well as other proteins in the scab
Term
what other enzymes come from fibroblasts and epithelial cells that degrade collagen?
Definition
matrix-metalloproteinases, of which there are 20 and only 1,2, and 3 are important.
Term
how does epithelial tissue grow differently in the granulation tissue phase, (as opposed to the inflammation phase)? why is this important?
Definition
epithelial tissue detaches from the original viable tissue and grows up and over the granulation tissue and under the scab, (which is important b/c it protects the wound from pathogens). outside the scab is present and underneath the epithelial tissue is already forming
Term
why is the granulation tissue formation step important? where does the "granular" name come from?
Definition
it fills the place where the tissue has been removed, (in any injury you remove some tissue). the name comes from the granular appearane, which is the result of the new blood vessel presence
Term
what is angiogenesis? why is it needed? does it remain?
Definition
angiogenesis provides RBCs which provide O2 for the highly active ETCs creating ATP for process. most of the new blood vessels will eventually be removed via apoptosis
Term
what is the "work horse" of granulation tissue? what do they do?
Definition
fibroblasts which synthesize collagen, elastin, glycosaminoglycans, and adhesive proteins.
Term
how do fibroblasts deposit collagen? what is collagen crosslinked with? what if this doesn't happen?
Definition
fibroblasts synthesize collagen and deposit it in long lines of fibrin fibers that cross-link with fibronectin. if this doesn't happen, collagen synthesis will occur but it will not be organized, and the synthesized tissue will be weak
Term
what % strength if healed tissue to undamaged? what about during wound healing?
Definition
healed tissue is only 75% as strong as undamaged. during wound healing, tissue is only 20% as strong
Term
what kind of smooth muscle moves into granulation tissue to synthesize extracellular matrix?
Definition
contractile proteins which are important in wound contraction
Term
what function does synthesis of extracellular matriperform?
Definition
it causes the granulation matrix to full up the space left by the injury
Term
what are the adhesive functions of fibrinogen?
Definition
aggregation of platelets, adhesion of platelets to surfaces, and clumping of bacteria
Term
what are non-adhesive functions of fibrinogen?
Definition
substrate for fibrin polymer, cross-linked fibrin promotes fibroblast migration
Term
what do adhesion molecules do?
Definition
bind cells to extracellular matrix and complement of extracellular matrix between themselves
Term
how does the structure of adhesion molecules inform their function?
Definition
adhesion molecules form tri, bi or monovalent molecules with binding sites on monomeric subunits. so for ex. a dimer with 2 binding sites for cells can bridge them together
Term
what is the structure of fibrinogen?
Definition
fibrinogen is a bivalent molecule whose structure is made of 2 halves
Term
what is the structure of collagen?
Definition
collagen is a polyvalent adhesion molecule with many binding sites, and thus collagen forms polymers with multiple binding sites along the molecule
Term
why is fibrinogen essential for wound healing?
Definition
its crosslinking promotes fibroblast migration who then synthesize collagen and deposit it in long lines of fibrin fibers that crosslink with fibronectin
Term
is fibrinogen indispensable for aggregation of platelets?
Definition
yes
Term
how is fibrinogen a bacteriostatic protein?
Definition
it clumps bacteria, which forms mult-bacterial complexes that can precipitate
Term
what is fibronectin?
Definition
a bivalent chemotactic protein that allows fibroblast and smooth muscle cell, (cells that further expands the tissue), movement towards fibronectin
Term
does fibronectin regulate cell growth and gene expression?
Definition
yes
Term
what are the adhesive functions of fibronectin?
Definition
platelet adhesion, binding to bacteria, neutrophils and fibroblasts
Term
what are the adhesive functions of thrombospondin? other functions? how many subunits does it have?
Definition
thrombospondin binds to cells and extracellular matrix. it also regulates cell growth. it has 3 monomeric subunits, (trivalent)
Term
what does laminin do in terms of adhesion? other functions?
Definition
laminin mediates binding of the matrix to adhesive cells. it also effects cell migration, reepithelialization and angiogenesis
Term
what does vitronectin do in terms of adhesion? other functions?
Definition
vitronectin binds to epithelial cells. it also effects reepithelialization
Term
what does collagen do in terms of adhesion? other functions?
Definition
collagen is the main adhesive component of the extracelluar matrix. it is also involves in connective tissue formation, and is a source of cytokines
Term
what is the structure of collagen? what is its shape in granulation tissue?
Definition
it is a long polymeric protein. it is synthesized rapidly and creates a scaffold on which other components of the extracellular matrix can be deposited
Term
how does collagen formation lead to scarring?
Definition
in large wounds, synthesis of collagen is too fast and is associated with the formation of scars.
Term
is there cytokine involvement with scar formation?
Definition
TGF-beta-1 operates in high conc. in fetal wounds, but in excess it can actually lead to extensive scarring. this is because when cells synthesize TGF-1, it can activate fibroblasts to stimulate more collagen
Term
what are excessive growths of collagen called?
Definition
keloids
Term
what is the adhesive function of elastin? other function?
Definition
elastin is an important adhesive component of the extracellular matrix. it is also the major protein of elastic fibers and a source of cytokines
Term
what is a main difference between elastin and collagen?
Definition
elasin can be stretched, collagen just bends
Term
are elastins essential for integrity of new tissue formation?
Definition
yes
Term
what is the adhesive function of proteoglycans? other function?
Definition
proteoglycans bind other substrate adhesion moleceules. they also are important in connective tissue formation and are a source of cytokines
Term
what do proteoglycans interact with?
Definition
proteoglycans interact with collagen and elastin to form the essence of the extracellular matrix
Term
what are collagen, elastin and proteoglycans all sources of?
Definition
cytokines
Term
are collagen, elastin and proteoglycans cells?
Definition
no they are macromolecules
Term
what do degradation products of collagen, elastin and proteoglycans function as?
Definition
they function as function as cytokines that bind to receptors and trigger signal transduction cascades
Term
can both cells and degradation products of macromolecules can secrete cytokines?
Definition
yes
Term
why is angiogenesis required for new tissue formation?
Definition
an oxygen supply is needed
Term
how can cancer possibly be treated in terms of angiogenesis?
Definition
cancer promotes angiogenesis, so if we can stop angiogenesis we can possibly starve cancer to death by removing its ability to receive oxygen
Term
what are cytokines with angiogenic properties that also promote endothelial cell proliferation and motility?
Definition
acidic FGF 1, basic FGF 2, and VEGF
Term
what are cytokines with just angiogenic properties?
Definition
angiogenin, TGF-alpha, TGF-beta, (inhibits proliferation of endothelial cells), wound fluid (promotes endothelial cell motility), prostaglandins, adipocyte lipids (promotes endothelial cell motility)
Term
where do new blood vessels come from?
Definition
they bud from existing blood vessels
Term
what does formation of extracellular matrix accomplish? is the scab still present in this phase?
Definition
this step fills the empty tissue after the wound is closed over with new epithelium. the scab still present in this phase
Term
what do matrix-metallo proteinases (MMP) do?
Definition
these enzymes that attack collagen, which is important because newly formed ECM is collagen rich
Term
what does collagenase digest?
Definition
fibrillar collagens I, II, and III
Term
what does gelatinase digest?
Definition
other collagen types
Term
what does stromelysin digest?
Definition
proteoglycans, fibronectin, elastin
Term
what does plasmin do?
Definition
this fibrinolytic enzyme activates zymogens of MMPs and other proteins
Term
what makes collagenase, gelatinase, stromelysin, and plasmin?
Definition
many cells but esp. fibroblasts and keratinocytes
Term
why does collagen need to be degraded in the final steps of wound healing?
Definition
collagen is initially formed and organized along fibrin-fibrinogen fibers in a loose, weak network that must be degraded and re-sythesized to make thicker fibers to add to tissue strenght
Term
after wound closure, what is the main process?
Definition
restructuring
Term
are skin substitutes useful or beneficial in wound healing?
Definition
yes, esp with burns that have large scale skin damage
Term
what are used in skin substitutes?
Definition
various ECM components, such as elastins supplemented with cytokines.
Term
have live sheets of cells been used in patients successfully?
Definition
yes with partially successful results
Term
whya re skin subsitutes only used in extreme cases?
Definition
expense
Term
what is a cytokine that has been FDA approved for clincal wound healing? how useful is it?
Definition
PDGF. it has some positive effects, but none that are universal or dramatic b/c of all the cytokines, concentration differences and timing involved in natural healing.
Term
is there anything PDGF has shown particular help with?
Definition
ulcerative wounds
Term
does recombinant human growth hormone have beneficial effects?
Definition
this has some beneficial effect, but cannot start the cascade that normal human growth hormone can use
Term
what is fibrin glue? how does it work?
Definition
bovine fibrinogen and thrombin that can be mixed together and used in surgery, will stop bleeding in seconds. these provide a scaffold for subsequent granulation tissue
Term
what circumstances can make wound healing worse?
Definition
in stressful states, IL-1 and 8 are decreased
Term
what has been found about churchgoers and wound healing capabilities?
Definition
churchgoers had IL-6 decreased, C-reactive, and fibrinogen decreased which are all assciated with the stress response
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