SLO 10.4 Necrosis and Apoptosis

10.4.1 differentiate between necrosis and apoptosis with examples

FeatureNecrosisApoptosis
DefinitionUncontrolled, accidental cell death caused by external factors, leading to cell rupture and inflammation.Programmed, controlled cell death that eliminates unnecessary or damaged cells without inflammation.
CauseExternal injuries or stressors such as trauma, infection, toxins, or lack of oxygen/blood supply.Internally regulated process triggered by developmental signals, DNA damage, or immune responses.
Mechanism– Cell membrane ruptures due to swelling.
– Organelles and cytoplasm are damaged.
– Contents leak, causing inflammation.
– Cell shrinks, chromatin condenses.
– DNA fragments in an orderly manner.
– Cell forms apoptotic bodies, which are phagocytosed.
Energy RequirementPassive process; no energy required.Active process; requires ATP.
InflammationCauses inflammation due to release of cellular contents.No inflammation; apoptotic bodies are cleared by phagocytes.
RegulationUnregulated, chaotic process.Highly regulated by genetic and biochemical pathways (e.g., caspase activation).
Impact on TissueDamages surrounding tissue due to inflammation.Does not harm surrounding tissue; often beneficial.
Examples– Tissue death from frostbite.
– Heart muscle damage during a heart attack (myocardial infarction).
– Removal of tadpole tail cells during frog metamorphosis.
– Elimination of damaged cells in response to DNA damage (e.g., in cancer prevention).

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