Histology and Organ Structure Flashcards

1
Q

Other than O2 entering through the lungs, where do all the other atoms entering the blood stream come from?

A
  • The digestive system
    • Cells use as building blocks
    • Nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, iodine, calcium, etc
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2
Q

What are the building blocks of proteins, carbohydratees and fats that the digestive system needs to pull out selectively?

A
  • Proteins - amino acids
    • Carbohydrates - monosaccharides
    • Fats - partially digested lipids like fatty acids and monoglycerides
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3
Q

What are the sphincters in place to prevent backward movement and to facilitate peristalsis?

A
  • Upper esophageal
    • Lower esophageal pyloric
    • Ileocecal
    • Internal and external anal sphincters
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4
Q

The esophagus and anus are unique in the digestive tube for what reason?

A
  • They are not really covered by mucus.
    • The mucosae is a tissue type that has a layer of mucus at the surface for protective purposes
    • Also helps the digesting normal flora live as well
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5
Q

What are the four definable layers of the digestive tube?

A
  • Mucosa
    • Submucosa
    • Muscularis externa
    • Serosa/adventitia
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6
Q

What is the muscularis externa?

A
  • Comprised of an inner circularly and outer longitudinally arranged layers of smooth muscle and nerve plexes
    • Its main function is peristalsis and churning of the lumenal contents
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7
Q

What is the submucosa?

A
  • Contains connective tissue that is usually more dense than in the mucosa, larger blood vessels, nerve plexes, glands and lymphatic nodules
    • Lymphoid cells of various types are also scattered throughout
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8
Q

What is the mucosa?

A
  • Comprised of an epithelial layer plus the underlying loose, well-vascularized connective tissue called the lamina propria
    • Thin layer of smooth muscle underlying this is referred to as the muscularis mucosae
    • Lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages will be scattered throughout the lamina propria

• Mucosa. The mucosa is made up of three components: the epithelium , a supporting lamina propria and a thin smooth muscle layer, the muscularis mucosae , which produces local movement and folding of the mucosa. At four points along the tract, the mucosa undergoes abrupt transition from one form to another: the gastro-oesophageal junction, the gastroduodenal junction, the ileocaecal junction and the rectoanal junction.

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9
Q

What is the serosa/adventitia?

A
  • Serosa is an outer covering of squamous epithelial cells separated from the underlying muscular layers by a relatively thin layer of connective tissue
    • It is called the adventitia in the case of the esophagus above the diaphragm where the outer squamous layer is absent

• Adventitia. This outer layer of loose supporting tissue conducts the major vessels, nerves and contains variable adipose tissue. Where the gut lies within the abdominal cavity ( peritoneal cavity ), the adventitia is referred to as the serosa ( visceral peritoneum ) and is lined by a simple squamous epithelium ( mesothelium ). Elsewhere, the adventitial layer merges with retroperitoneal tissues.

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10
Q

Describe the organization of the esophagus

A
  • Muscular tube that is 2/3 1/3 split in the type of muscles that control the movements
    • Top 2/3 is under skelatal muscle control mostly with a mix of smooth muscle as well
    • Bottom 1/3 is all smooth muscle
    • No digestion happens here, it’s a muscular tube designed to transport food from the mouth to the stomach, thus it is missing the cornified epithelial digestive layer
    • The valve or sphincter to the stomach is not a true or complete one, but made up of tonic muscular contractions
    • Heartburn is gastric reflux through this partial sphincter which can be due to alterations in smooth muscle tone.
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11
Q

How is the stomach histologically divided?

A

• Three histologically distinguishable zones
• Cardia, fundus and pyloris
• Cardia
○ Small area of mainly mucus-secreting glands around the entry of the esophagus
• Fundus
○ Main body of the stomach that secretes acid, peptic digestive products and mucus
• Pyloris
○ Secretes mainly mucus and has a relative preponderance of endocrine cells that secrete the stomach hormone gastrin

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12
Q

What is special about the wall of the stomach?

A
  • Contains substantial longitudinal folds called rugae or plicae mucosae that disappear upon distension
    • Outer muscularis externa differs from the basic pattern in that a third oblique layer of smooth muscle is present just lumenally to the circular muscular layer
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13
Q

The stomach differs from the rest of the GI in the architecture of it’s mucosa. How?

A
  • Facing the open cavity of the stomach are surface mucous-secreting cells
    • These are arranged in a myriad of folds along with an underlying lamina propria
    • Between the epithelial folds are spaces or gastric pits
    • Beginning at the bottom of the mucous secreting pits the epithelium changes and continues deep into the mucosa as one or more tubular gastric glands
    • The gastric glands contain a number of differentiated epithelial cells that are crucial for the unique funciton of the stomach: to begin the digestion of food at an acidic pH
    • The lumen of the stomach essentially extends to the very bottom of the lumen of the gastric glands, although these glands secrete components outwards
    • Humans have 3-4 million of these
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14
Q

How often are surface cells replaced in the gastric epithelium?

A
  • Every 3-5 days.
    • Main point here is that they are super rapidly dividing and constantly replenishing themselves
    • Such a high stem cell reservoir as well as a high mitotic rate will make these cells super susceptible to certain mitotically inhibitory drugs
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15
Q

The stomach’s stem cells have two different routes they can take upon differentiation. What are these?

A
  • They can divide and rise upward to the mucous secreting cells
    • OR they can migrate downward to the various specialized cells in the gastric glands
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16
Q

What do the surface mucous cells do?

A
  • They contain large vesicles full of stomach mucins and bicarbonate
    • Discharge these vesicles locally onto the surface to provide a viscous protective layer that shelters the epithelial cells against stomach acid and abrasion from churning chyme
    • Directly covering the short microvilli of the these surface cells is a more structured layer of cell surface glycoproteins, the glycocalyx
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17
Q

What are the chief cells and what do they do?

A
  • These cells are involved in the beginning of digestion and play less of a role in GI protection
    • Chief cells are typical protein secretors with apical granules and an elaborate basal RER
    • The primary secretory product is pepsinogen which gets converted to an active protease, pepsin, in the presence of acid
    • Pepsin is a protease that functions optimally at low pH
    • Chief (or peptic) cells can divide or be derived directly from stem cells
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18
Q

What are the different layers of a gastric pit?

A

• Pit
○ Contains the surface mucous cells
• Isthmus
○ Cell architecture is mixed
• Neck
○ Mucous neck cells, which make a different mix of protective proteins?
○ Parietal cells start popping up here
• Fundus
○ Not to be confused with the gross fundus of the stomach as an entire organ
○ Parietal cells and chief cells, with chief cells more represented the deeper you go

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19
Q

What do the parietal cells do?

A

• Unique acid-producing cells specialized to pumping H+ ions into the lumen of the gastric glands against a pretty steep gradient
• Does this using a H+/K+ - ATPase
• The pH of the gastric juice thus secreted is 1-1.5, so production of acid is a vigorous, energy demanding activity
• These cells have an extensive set of microvilli bordering canaliculi that extend well into the cell so they have an enormous surface area for pumping protons into the lumen
• They also contain a large number of mitochondria, characteristic of cells partaking in major transport functions
• Parietal cells are stimulated to produce acid by secretion of the local hormone gastrin and histamine
• Parietal cells also secrete an important glycoprotein required for uptake of vitamin B12 - intrinsic factor
○ Super important for RBC production in bone marrow

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20
Q

What is up with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome?

A
  • Excessive secretion of gastrin results in overproduction of HCl by parietal cells
    • It cannot be adequately neutralized in the small intestine and leads to duodenal ulcers and complications
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21
Q

What are the enteroendocrine cells and what do they do?

A

• There are many flavors of these cells through the GI tract
• Members of a widely distributed population collectively referred to as APUD cells
○ Amine precursor uptake decarboxylation
• Many of these cells are in the GI tract, but they do not have to be
• STOMACH -
○ G cells that secrete gastrin (pyloris mostly)
○ A-cells that secrete glucagon
○ EC-cells that secrete serotonin
○ D-cells that secrete somatostatin (everywhere but middle portion of stomach)
• Cells are oriented towards vascular side, not lumenal side

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22
Q

What do the A cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ A cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach and small intestine
	• Hormone produced
		○ glucagon
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates glycogenolysis by hepatocytes, thus elevating blood glucose levels
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23
Q

What do the D cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ D cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach, small and large intestine
	• Hormone produced
		○ somatostatin
	• Hormone action
		○ Inhibits release of hormones by enteroendocrine cells in the vicinity
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24
Q

What do the EC cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ EC cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach, small and large intestines
	• Hormone produced
		○ Serotonin
		○ Substance P
	• Hormone action
		○ Increases peristaltic movement
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25
Q

What do the ECL cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ ECL cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach only
	• Hormone produced
		○ histamine
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates HCl secretion
26
Q

What do the G cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ G cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach and small intestine
	• Hormone produced
		○ gastrin
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates HCL secretion
		○ Stimulates gastric motility especially contraction of pyloric region and relaxation of pyloric sphincter to regulate stomach emptying
		○ Proliferation of regenerative cells in the body of the stomach
27
Q

What do the GL cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ GL cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach, small and large intestines
	• Hormone produced
		○ glicentin
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates hepatocyte glycogenolysis
		○ Elevates blood glucose levels
28
Q

What do the I cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ I cell
	• Location
		○ Small intestine only
	• Hormone produced
		○ cholecystokinin
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates the release of pancreateic hormone and contraction of the gall bladder
29
Q

What do the K cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ K cell
	• Location
		○ Small intestine only
	• Hormone produced
		○ Gastric inhibitory peptide
	• Hormone action
		○ Inhibit HC secretion
30
Q

What do the Mo cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ Mo cell
	• Location
		○ Small intestine only
	• Hormone produced
		○ motilin
	• Hormone action
		○ Increases intestinal peristalsis
31
Q

What do the N cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ N cell
	• Location
		○ Small intestine only
	• Hormone produced
		○ neurotensin
	• Hormone action
		○ Increases blood flow to ileum and decreases peristaltic action of small and large intestines
32
Q

What do the PP cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ PP cell or F cell
	• Location
		○ Stomach and large intestine
	• Hormone produced
		○ Pancreatic polypeptide
	• Hormone action
		○ unknown
33
Q

What do the S cells secrete and where are they?

A
• Cell
		○ S cell
	• Location
		○ Small intestine only
	• Hormone produced
		○ secretin
	• Hormone action
		○ Stimulates release of bicarbonate-rich fluid from pancreas
34
Q

What do the VIP cells secrete and where are they?

A

• Cell
○ VIP cell
• Location
○ Stomach and small and large intestines
• Hormone produced
○ Vasoactive intestinal peptide
• Hormone action
○ Increases peristaltic action of small and large intestines
○ Stimulates elimination of water and ions by GI tract

35
Q

What are the three segments of the small intestine?

A
  • Duodenum
    • Jejunum
    • Ileum
36
Q

Describe (general) the environment change between the stomach and duodenum

A
  • Upon relaxation of the pyloric sphincter between the stomach and duodenum, chyme at a low pH passes into duodenum
    • Digestion continues in duodenum but way different pH
    • Digestion is from enzymes released by pancreas and enzymes present at the surface of the intestinal mucosa itself
37
Q

What are goblet mucous cells?

A

• Goblet mucous cells are scattered between absorptive/digestive cells
○ Produce mucous for protection/lubrication
○ Least abundant in duodenum

38
Q

What are plicae circulares

A

• Small intestine structures that help achieve the need for tons of surface area to facilitate absorption as well as digestion
• Permanent transverse-oriented folds
• Project into lumen about 1cm
• Plicae are covered with villi that increase the surface area about 8 fold
• The enterocytes themselves help to increase surface area even more with microvilli at the surface
• Distributed over the microvillar surface is a glycocalyx into which glycoproteins of the plasma membrane extend
• Digestive processes occur within the glycocalyx as digestive enzymes are found in this matrix
• Goblet mucous cells are scattered between absorptive/digestive cells
○ Produce mucous for protection/lubrication
○ Least abundant in duodenum

39
Q

What are the different glands in the small intestine (early on) and what do they do?

A

• Crypts of lieberkuhn
○ Simple, tubular glands penetrate from the base of the villi deeper into the mucosa
○ Epithelium of the crypts is continuous with surface epithelium
○ Stemm cells are most abundant in lower 1/3 of crypts and replenish the other cells
§ Mucous cells
§ Enterocytes
§ Paneth cells
○ Paneth cells
§ Contain large esosinophilic granules which contain antibacterial peptides called defensins in addition to lysozyme and phospholipase
• Brunner’s glands
○ Only found in duodenum and release lots of bicarb into the crypts to neutralize the acidic chyme from the pyloris

40
Q

What are Brunner’s glands?

A

• Brunner’s glands

○ Only found in duodenum and release lots of bicarb into the crypts to neutralize the acidic chyme from the pyloris

41
Q

What are the Crypts of lieberkuhn?

A

• Crypts of lieberkuhn
○ Simple, tubular glands penetrate from the base of the villi deeper into the mucosa
○ Epithelium of the crypts is continuous with surface epithelium
○ Stemm cells are most abundant in lower 1/3 of crypts and replenish the other cells
§ Mucous cells
§ Enterocytes
§ Paneth cells
○ Paneth cells
§ Contain large esosinophilic granules which contain antibacterial peptides called defensins in addition to lysozyme and phospholipase

42
Q

Describe the organization of the intestinal villi.

A

• Highly structured
• Contain a loose lamina propria core within which small blood vessels and capillaries course
• Also contain a scattering of lymphocytes
• Also a series of small lymphatic spaces that join a larger lymphatic vessel in the center - lacteal
• Lacteal can transport fluid entering from lumen of intestin
• Lacteal also transports lipoprotein droplets called chylomicrons
○ Enterocytes suck up building blocks from lumen then pump di/triglycerides into lacteal
• Blood from capillaries goes to hepatic portal system
• Lacteal fluid to larger lymphatics and eventually thoracic duct

43
Q

Describe generally the work of the peyer’s patches

A

• Lymphatic nodules and groups of nodules within the GI tube
• Specialized epithelial cells - M cells - function as antigen-uptake cells
○ Phagocytose luminal contents and present antigens to underlying lymphocytes and macrophages
• Plasma cells of the nodules release IgA class immunoglobulins
• IgA binds to receptors on epithelial cells and are transcytosed to the lumenal surface where they serve as antibacterial neutralizers and opsinizers
○ Discourage inappropriate bacterial colonization

44
Q

Where are brunner’s glands in the small intestine?

A
• Duodenum
		○ present
	• Jejunum
		○ absent
	• Ileum
		○ absent
45
Q

Where are lymphatic tissue patches in the small intestine?

A
• Duodenum
		○ A bit
	• Jejunum
		○ more
	• Ileum
		○ A TON
46
Q

Where are Goblet cells in the small intestine?

A
• Duodenum
		○ A bit
	• Jejunum
		○ more
	• Ileum
		○ The most
47
Q

Where are plicae circularres in the small intestine?

A
• Duodenum
		○ A bit
	• Jejunum
		○ The most
	• Ileum
		○ A bit
48
Q

Describe the distribution of villi in the small intestine?

A
• Duodenum
		○ Most numerous
	• Jejunum
		○ Decrease distally
	• ileum
		○ Least abundant
49
Q

What are the major pancreatic enzymes that are zymogens?

A
  • Zymogens are enzymes that require some break-down or modulation event to become active
    • Trypsin
    • Chymotrypsin
    • Elastase
    • Carboxypeptidase
    • Triacylglycerol lipase
50
Q

How is the acinar pancreas organized?

• Acini are clusters of pancreatic acinar cells that are arranged at the end of a common duct

A

○ Cul-de-sac houses at the end of a dead-end street
• Basal portion of these cells is full of rough endoplasmic reticulum that synthesizes protein for secretion
• The apical portion is full of secretory granules galled zymogen granules which contain the packaged product for secretion into the ducts

51
Q

What are centroacinar cells?

A
  • Found in the acini, which represent the beginning of the duct system
    • Duct cells secrete much of the volume of the pancreatic juice, including water and bicarbonate to help the brunner’s glands neutrallize the acid arriving from stomach
    • Secretion is under control of both secretin and cholycystokinin
    • 98% of the pancreas is dedicated to exocrine function
52
Q

What is the purpose of the whole zymogen thing?

A
  • We want these enzymes active in the lumen of the GI, not while they are en route to the lumen
    • If these enzymes were active in the pancreas they’d create problems by digesting the organ itself
53
Q

What are the two pancreatic enzymes that are not zymogens but are active at the time of secretion?

A

• Amylase
○ Degrades starch to glucose and maltose
• Ribonuclease
○ Cleaves RNA

54
Q

How does trypsin become active?

A

• Trypsinogen is a pancreatic enzyme and is activated by a proteolytic cleavage by enterokinase
○ Enterokinase is not pancreatic
○ It’s on the surface of dutodenal digestive/absorptic cells
§ Enterocytes
• Trypsin then activates the other pancreatic zymogens by proteolysis

55
Q

Give two examples why it behooves the GI tract to have the last stages of breakdown happen within the glycocalyx just on the surface of the enterocytes?

A

• Examples of amylase function and glucose absorption
• Amylase
○ Makes maltose and isomaltose which are broken down by membrane anchored enzymes in the apical plasma membrane of enterocytes
○ Glucose is the result and now the enterocytes get all the glucose and the bacteria don’t
• Lactase is also an example
○ If people are deficient in MEMBRANE-ASSOCIATED lactase then the bacteria get all the lactose and they get gassy and bloated

56
Q

The externa, the muscular layer of the small intestine, is innervated by what?

A
  • Efferent fibers of the myenteric nerve plexus
    • Also the plexus of Auerbach
    • Clusters of ganglion cell bodies are present between the two layers of the externa
57
Q

What structures of the small intestine are not present in the large intestine?

A
  • Plicae and villi

* The large intestine is much more smooth

58
Q

What are columns of morgagni?

A

• Longitudinal structural folds of the mucosa

59
Q

Describe the organization of the large intestine

A

• Grossly the cecum, appendix, and the different parts of the colon, then the rectum
• Contains numberous straight tubular glands or crypts and the epithelial layer has two cell types, abundant mucous-producing cells and absorptive cells
• Main function is recovery of water and salt during conentration of fecal material
• 2/3 of large intestine wall is muscular with a large band of circular smooth muscle
• Muscular specializations are observed in the longitudinal layer
○ Most of this consists of bands called taeniae
○ Segmented contraction of the taeniae causes sacculation of the bowel which compresses and segments fecal material
○ At the anus, the circular layer is thickened to form the internal anal sphincter, and downstream is circular striated muscle, the external anal sphincter

60
Q

What are the three main salivary glands?

A
  • Submandibular glands
    • Sublingual gland (singular)
    • Parotid glands
    • Serous, mucous or mixed secretions
    • Parotid - serous secretor
    • Submandibular - mixed
    • Sublingual - mucous
    • Glands are organized based on ancinar design
    • Contraction of myoepithelial cells serve to propel salivary secretions from the acini
    • Serous secretions are watery and contain enzymes like amylase, Rnase and dnase
    • Mucous secretions are lubricative and protective
    • Serous epithelial cells also transport IgA class immunoglobulins that, together with lysozyme and peroxidase, provide antibacterial action
    • Duct cells modify the ionic contents of the saliva as the contents move toward major ducts