granule cells
(noun)
These cells receive excitatory input from mossy fibers that originate from pontine nuclei.
(noun)
An extremely small type of neuron that is the the smallest cell found in the brain.
Examples of granule cells in the following topics:
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Cell Inclusions and Storage Granules
- Sulfur is most often stored as elemental (S0) granules which can be deposited either intra- or extracellularly.
- Sulfur granules are especially common in bacteria that use hydrogen sulfide as an electron source.
- The internal microenvironment of a prokaryotic cell (pH, osmolarity) may differ from that of the original source of the gene.
- In addition, the fine controls that may keep the concentration of a protein low will also be missing in a prokaryotic cell, and overexpression can result in filling a cell with ectopic protein that, even if it were properly folded, would precipitate by saturating its environment.
- Explain the hypothesis regarding the formation of inclusion bodies and the importance of storage granules
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Development of the Dual Lymphocyte System
- B cells and T cells are the major types of lymphocytes.
- Mammalian stem cells differentiate into several kinds of blood cell within the bone marrow.
- B cells mature into B lymphocytes in the bone marrow, while T cells migrate to, and mature in, a distinct organ called the thymus.
- Effector lymphocytes function to eliminate the antigen, either by releasing antibodies (in the case of B cells), cytotoxic granules (cytotoxic T cells) or by signaling to other cells of the immune system (helper T cells).
- Mammalian stem cells differentiate into several kinds of blood cell within the bone marrow.
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Natural Killer Cells
- Natural killer cells (NK cells) are cytotoxic lymphocyte critical to the innate immune system.
- NK cells provide rapid responses to virally infected cells and respond to tumor formation by destroying abnormal and infected cells.
- NK cells use two cytolytic granule mediated apoptosis to destroy abnormal and infected cells.
- The granules of NK cells contain proteins such as perforin and proteases known as granzymes.
- Antibodies that bind to antigens can be recognized by FcϒRIII (CD16) receptors (a type of activating receptor), resulting in NK activation, release of cytolytic granules, and consequent cell apoptosis.
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Types of WBCs
- A major distinguishing feature is the presence of granules; white blood cells are often characterized as granulocytes or agranulocytes.
- These granules are membrane-bound enzymes that act primarily in the digestion of endocytosed particles.
- They may also cause granule dependent cell-mediated apoptosis through the release of perforins, granzymes, and proteases.
- The cells include:
- Monocytes and their progeny contain toll-like receptors and granules.
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Natural Killer Cells
- After a pathogen enters the body, infected cells are identified and destroyed by natural killer (NK) cells, which are a type of lymphocyte that can kill cells infected with viruses or tumor cells (abnormal cells that uncontrollably divide and invade other tissue).
- As such, NK cells offer a complementary check for unhealthy cells, relative to T cells.
- NK cells are always active; an interaction with normal, intact MHC I molecules on a healthy cell disables the killing sequence, causing the NK cell to move on.
- After the NK cell detects an infected or tumor cell, its cytoplasm secretes granules comprised of perforin: a destructive protein that creates a pore in the target cell.
- Phagocytic cells then digest the cell debris left behind.
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Lymphoid Cells
- The three major types of lymphocyte are T cells, B cells, and natural killer cells.
- Therefore it acts as an inhibitor of NK cell activity, and NK cells will activate and destroy cells when it does not detect MHC class I on that cell surface.
- Activated NK cells release cytotoxic (cell-killing) granules that contain perforin and granzyme, which can lyse cell membranes and induce apoptosis to kill infected or abnormal cells.
- T cells are involved in cell-mediated immunity whereas B cells are primarily responsible for humoral immunity.
- There are two types of T-cells involved in adaptive, cell-mediated immunity.
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Phagocytes
- Oxidative stress can kill a cell through DNA, cell membrane, or mitochondrial damage.
- Mature monocytes have large, smooth, lobed nuclei and an abundant cytoplasm that contains granules, but are not technically considered granulocytes.
- Macrophages do not have granules, but contain many lysosomes.
- They also degranulate their granules to release perforin, granzyme, proteases, and other chemicals to do cytotoxic damage to pathogens (and occasionally normal bodily tissues as well).
- In addition to these functions, mast cells produce cytokines kept in their granules, such as histamine that induce an inflammatory response when a pathogen is detected.
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Types of Adaptive Immunity
- Cell mediated immunity is controlled by type 1 helper T-cells (Th1) and cytotoxic T-cells.
- These cells are activated by antigen presenting cells, which causes the cells to rapidly mature into forms that are specific to that antigen.
- Helper-T cells facilitate the immune response by guiding cytotoxic T-cells to pathogens or pathogen-infected cells, while the cytotoxic T-cells will kill the pathogens or pathogen-infected cells.
- Some of the ways in which cytotoxic T-cells kill pathogens include the release of granules that contain the cytotoxins perforin and granzyme, which lyse small pores in the membrane of a pathogen.
- Then T-cell produced proteases can enter the pathogen and induce an apotosis response within the cell.
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White Blood Cells
- The role of white blood cells is very different from that of red blood cells.
- One of the two main groups are the granulocytes, which contain granules in their cytoplasm, and include the neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils ( a).
- The second main group is the agranulocytes, which lack granules in their cytoplasm, and include the monocytes and lymphocytes ( b).
- They include B cells, T cells, and natural killer cells.
- T cells attack viruses, fungi, some bacteria, transplanted cells, and cancer cells.
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WBC Function
- This process is performed primarily by mast cells, eosinophils, basophils, and NK cells.
- When pathogens are encountered, granule dependent apoptosis (a mechanism of cytotoxicity) may be induced in the pathogen by releasing perforins, granzymes, and proteaseases from their granules.
- Cell mediated activities.
- This process is performed by T cells.
- Memory cell activity.