サイトーシス、(病名)細胞増多症、細胞増多
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出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2015/04/24 17:52:19」(JST)
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Entry of material into the nucleus through endocytosis. Endocytosis: The membrane of the cell invaginates, creating a small circular pit that is taken into the cytosol of the cell. This circular membrane coated pit is a vescile that is transported to the lysosome of the cell to be degraded by enzymes.
Cytosis is a transport mechanism for the movement of large quantities of molecules into and out of cells.
There are three main types of cytosis: Endocytosis, exocytosis, and transcytosis.
Contents
- 1 Endocytosis
- 2 Exocytosis
- 3 Transcytosis
- 4 See also
- 5 References
Endocytosis
Endocytosis is when a cell absorbs molecules, such as proteins, from outside the cell by engulfing it with the cell membrane. It is used by most cells, because many critical substances are large polar molecules that cannot pass through the cell membrane. The two major types of endocytosis are pinocytosis and phagocytosis.
- Pinocytosis
- Pinocytosis, also known as cell drinking, is the absorption of small aqueous particles along with the membrane receptors that recognize them. It is an example of fluid phase endocytosis and is usually a continuous process within the cell. The particles are absorbed through the use of clathrin coated pits. These clathrin coated pits are short lived and serve only to form a vesicle for transfer of particles to the lysosome. The clathrin coated pit invaginates into the cytosol and forms a clathrin coated vesicle. The clathrin proteins will then dissociate.[1] What is left is known as an early endosome. The early endosome merges with a late endosome. This is the vesicle that allows the particles that were endocytosed to be transported into the lysosome. Here there are hydrolytic enzymes that will degrade the contents of the late endosome. Sometimes rather than being degraded, the receptors that were endocytosed along with the ligand are then returned to the plasma membrane to continue the process of endocytosis.
Mechanism of clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Clathrin-coated pits in endocytosis: The membrane of the cell invaginates using the protein clathrin. The clathrin uses actin to pull together the sides of the plasma membrane and form a vesicle inside the cellular cytosol.
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis is a mode of pinocytosis. Proteins in the clathrin coat on the plasma membrane have propensity to bind and trap macromolecules or ligands. However, it is not the receptors in the pit that caused the pinocytosis. The vesicles would have formed regardless of whether or not the receptors and ligand were there.[2] This is why it is still a continuous non-triggered event, unlike phagocytosis which is explained below.
- Phagocytosis
- Phagocytosis is also known as cell eating, is the absorption of larger particles into the cytosol including things like bacterium. In smaller single celled organisms this is how it feeds. In larger multicellular organisms it is a way of destroying old or damaged cells or ingesting microbial invaders. In the case of ingesting a bacterium, the bacterium will be bound by antibodies in the aqueous environment. When this antibody runs into a receptor on the surface of a cell, the plasma membrane responds by extending itself to surround the bacterium. Thus, phagocytosis is not a randomly occurring event. It is triggered by a ligand binding to a receptor.
Some cells are specially designed to phagocytize. These cells include Natural Killer cells, macrophages, and neutrophils. All of these are involved in the immune response and serve to degrade foreign or antigenic material[3]
Exocytosis
Exocytosis is when a cell directs the contents of secretory vesicles out of the cell membrane. The vesicles fuse with the cell membrane and their content, usually protein, is released out of the cell. There are two types of exocytosis: Constitutive secretion and Regulated secretion. In both of these types, a vesicle buds from the Golgi Apparatus and are shuttled to the plasma membrane to be exocytosed from the cell. Exocytosis of lysosomes commonly serves to repair damaged areas of the plasma membrane by replenishing the lipid bi-layer.[4]
- Constitutive secretion(irregulated exocytosis)
- This is when the vesicle that buds from the Golgi Apparatus contains both soluble proteins as well as lipids and proteins that will remain on the plasma membrane after fusion of the vesicle. This type of secretion is unregulated. The vesicle will eventually travel to the plasma membrane and fuse with it. The contents of the cell will be released into the extra-cellular space while the components of the vesicle membrane (plasma membrane lipids and proteins) will establish themselves as part of the cell's plasma membrane.
- Regulated secretion (regulated exocytosis)
- This is when the cell receives a signal from the extra-cellular space, such as a neurotransmitter or hormone, that regulates the fusing of the vesicle to the plasma membrane and the release of its contents. The vesicle is transported to the plasma membrane. There it sits until it receives a signal to fuse with the membrane and release its contents into the extra-cellular space.[5]
Transcytosis
Transcytosis is a type of cytosis that allows particles to be shuttled from one membrane to another. An example of this would be when a receptor normally lies on the basal or lateral membrane of an epithelial cell, but needs to be trafficked to the apical side. This can only be done through transcytosis due to tight junctions, which prevent movement from one plasma membrane domain to another. This type of cytosis occurs commonly in epithelium, intestinal cells, and blood capillaries. Transcytosis can also be taken advantage of by pathogenic molecules and organisms. Several studies have shown that bacterium can easily enter intestinal lumen through transcytosis of goblet cells.[6] Other studies, however, are exploring the idea that transcytosis may play a role in allowing medications to cross the blood-brain barrier. Exploiting this fact may allow certain drug therapies to be better utilized by the brain.[7]
Methods of cytosis not only move substances in, out of, and through cells, but also add and subtract membrane from the cell's plasma membrane. The surface area of the membrane is determined by the balance of the two mechanisms and contribute to the homeostatic environment of the cell.
See also
- Clathrin
- Hydrolase
- Lysosome
- Phagocytosis
- Pinocytosis
References
- ^ Rappoport JZ (June 2008). "Focusing on clathrin-mediated endocytosis". The Biochemical Journal412 (3): 415–23. doi:10.1042/BJ20080474. PMID 18498251
- ^ Mukherjee S, Ghosh RN, Maxfield FR (July 1997). "Endocytosis". Physiological Reviews 77 (3): 759–803. PMID 9234965. Retrieved 2012-11-14
- ^ Lodish, H. Berk, A., Kaiser, C., Kreiger, M., Bretscher, A., Ploegh, H., Amon, A., Scott, M. (2012) Molecular Cell Biology (7th ed.). W.H. Freeman and Co. New York: New York.
- ^ Xu, J., Toops, K. A., Diaz, F., Carvajal-Gonzalez, J. M., Gravotta, D., Mazzoni, F., ... & Lakkaraju, A. (2012). Mechanism of polarized lysosome exocytosis in epithelial cells. Journal of Cell Science
- ^ Lodish, H. Berk, A., Kaiser, C., Kreiger, M., Bretscher, A., Ploegh, H., Amon, A., Scott, M. (2012) Molecular Cell Biology (7th ed.). W.H. Freeman and Co. New York: New York.
- ^ Nikitas, G.; Deschamps, C.; Disson, O.; Niault, T.; Cossart, P.; Lecuit, M. (2011). "Transcytosis of Listeria monocytogenes across the intestinal barrier upon specific targeting of goblet cell accessible E-cadherin". Journal of Experimental Medicine 208 (11): 2263–2277. doi:10.1084/jem.20110560. PMC 3201198. PMID 21967767
- ^ Y. Joy Yu, et al. (2001). “Boosting Brain Uptake of a Therapeutic Antibody by Reducing Its Affinity for a Transcytosis Target”. Science Translational Medicine 3 (84). doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.3002230. PMID 21613623
Membrane transport
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Mechanisms for chemical transport through biological membranes
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Passive transport |
- Diffusion (Facilitated diffusion)
- Osmosis
- Uniporter
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Active transport |
- Primary active transport
- Secondary active transport
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Cytosis |
Endocytosis
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- Efferocytosis
- Non-specific, adsorptive pinocytosis
- Phagocytosis
- Pinocytosis
- Potocytosis
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Transcytosis
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Exocytosis
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Degranulation
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Index of cells
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Description |
- Structure
- Organelles
- peroxisome
- cytoskeleton
- centrosome
- epithelia
- cilia
- mitochondria
- Membranes
- Membrane transport
- ion channels
- vesicular transport
- solute carrier
- ABC transporters
- ATPase
- oxidoreduction-driven
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Disease |
- Structural
- peroxisome
- cytoskeleton
- cilia
- mitochondria
- nucleus
- scleroprotein
- Membrane
- channelopathy
- solute carrier
- ATPase
- ABC transporters
- other
- extracellular ligands
- cell surface receptors
- intracellular signalling
- Vesicular transport
- Pore-forming toxins
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English Journal
- Obtaining spheroplasts of armored dinoflagellates and first single-channel recordings of their ion channels using patch-clamping.
- Pozdnyakov I1, Matantseva O2, Negulyaev Y3, Skarlato S4.
- Marine drugs.Mar Drugs.2014 Sep 5;12(9):4743-55. doi: 10.3390/md12094743.
- Ion channels are tightly involved in various aspects of cell physiology, including cell signaling, proliferation, motility, endo- and exo-cytosis. They may be involved in toxin production and release by marine dinoflagellates, as well as harmful algal bloom proliferation. So far, the patch-clamp tec
- PMID 25199048
- Severe periodontal disease manifested in chronic disseminated type of langerhans cell histiocytosis in a 3-year old child.
- Bansal M1, Srivastava VK2, Bansal R3, Gupta V4, Bansal M5, Patne S6.
- International journal of clinical pediatric dentistry.Int J Clin Pediatr Dent.2014 Sep-Dec;7(3):217-9. doi: 10.5005/jp-journals-10005-1269. Epub 2015 Feb 9.
- Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH), previously known as histio-cytosis X, is a rare idiopathic disorder of reticulo-endothelial system with abnormal proliferation of bone marrow derived Langerhans cells along with a variable number of leukocytes, such as eosinophils, neutrophils, lymphocytes and pl
- PMID 25709306
- The perfect storm: hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis complicating disseminated yersiniosis.
- Bidros M, Chirch LM, Santos MT, Tannenbaum SH.
- Connecticut medicine.Conn Med.2014 Mar;78(3):143-8.
- Hemophagocytic lymphohistio-cytosis (HLH) is a rare but serious medical condition with variable clinical outcome. HLH presents real diagnostic and therapeutic challenges to the treating physician despite the major advances in molecular laboratory testing and the immune-chemotherapeutic interventions
- PMID 24772830
Japanese Journal
- 局所温熱処置によるラット筋肉内結合組織における紡錘形細胞の増加
- 田川 泰,片岡 英樹,坂井 孝行 [他],近藤 康隆,安藤 絵美 [他],坂井 孝行,近藤 康隆,安藤 絵美,沖田 実
- 保健学研究 21(1), 23-28, 2008-11-00
- 温熱療法は筋・関節拘縮の治療法として利用されている.この局所温熱効果は臨床的に有効と思われているが,その生理学と細胞生物学の解明は不明である.そこで,温熱に対する筋肉内結合組織の紡錘形細胞数の細胞動態をラット下肢で検討した.Wistar 系ラットを通常飼育する対照群6匹と下肢骨格筋を加温する加温群6匹に分け,加温群は42℃に設定した温水浴により加温した.結果,加温群のヒラメ筋に分布する紡錘形細胞数 …
- NAID 110007130230
- 1220 壊死大腿骨頭の骨梁構造および力学特性評価(G02-3 骨梁構造とリモデリング,G02 バイオエンジニアリング)
- 山子 剛,徳永 邦彦,遠藤 直人,原 利昭
- 年次大会講演論文集 : JSME annual meeting 2005(5), 181-182, 2005-09-18
- … An essential ION treatment is to prevent collapse of a degeneration site on femoral head with necro-cytosis. … The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the trabecular architecture and the degree of mineralization of bone (DMB) using micro-CT image data in the necro-cytosis area. …
- NAID 110006191750
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- Cytosisとは?goo Wikipedia (ウィキペディア) 。出典:Wikipedia(ウィキペディア)フリー百科事典。 Cytosisとは - goo Wikipedia (ウィキペディア) gooトップ サイトマップ スタートページに設定 RSS ヘルプ メニューへスキップ 本文へスキップ ...
- cy·to·sis (sī-tō′sĭs) n. A condition in which there is more than the usual number of cells. cytosis [sītō′sis] a condition in which there is a greater than normal number of cells in a tissue or organ. cy·to·sis (sī-tō'sis), 1. A condition in ...
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網状赤血球増加 網状赤血球増加症、網状赤血球増多症