Respiratory 6 - Lung cell biology Flashcards

1
Q

How many generations of gas exchange units are there?

A

23

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2
Q

What proportion of epithelial cells are goblet cells?

A

1/5

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3
Q

Describe the role of Type II cells.

A

Produce SURFACTANT (so that lung does not collapse at low pressure on exhalation)
Also synthesise and secrete antiproteases
Make up 5% of alveolar surface
Precursor for Type 1 pneumocytes

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4
Q

What is the role of Type I epithelial cells?

A

Gas exchange takes place through them

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5
Q

What is the role of Type I epithelial cells?

A

Gas exchange takes place through them

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6
Q

What do endosomes do in the lung cells?

A

They transfer solutes accross the blood-gas barrier.

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7
Q

What are caveolae?

A

“little caves” - indentations in endothelial/epithelial cells where excoytosis happens - communication.

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8
Q

Where is surfactant stored in epithelial type II cells?

A

In lamellar bodies

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9
Q

How do surfactants look like and how do they work?

A

They are secreted as swirls. Then unravels to form a layer over the epithelium. Can form 9 layers for example.
Unused surfactant is stored in “the corners” of the alveolus as tubular myelin.

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10
Q

What is surfactant made of?

A

10% protein - contains protein used in spreading and activity of surfactant
90% lipid, of which 90% is phospholipid. This enable polarisation at the apical surface.

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11
Q

What are the 3 main structuresof pulmonary vasculature?

A
  • muscular
  • partially muscular (terminal bronchiole)
  • non muscular (respiratory bronchioles)
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12
Q

What happens to alveoli in someone with COPD (emphysema)?

A

No solid fill, holes appearing - loss of respiratory surface

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13
Q

What happens in fibrosis?

A

The lungs attempt to repair but leads to scar tissue formation = fibrosis.
Lungs become solid

Type II cells multiply to repair damaged alveolar epithelium but also produce too much surfactant and stimulate fibroblast production of connective tissue (collagen deposit).
gas exchange = impossible

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14
Q

How does oedema impair gas exchange (IV endotoxin)?

A

Oedema will form in between capillary and epithelial cell which takes away surface gas exchange.

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15
Q

How do goblet cells and mucus change in smokers?

A

Goblet cells INCREASE in number
Secretions INCREASE in quantity
Secretions are THICKER

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16
Q

What is the structure of mucus?

A

A thin sol phase overlays the cells

A thick gel phase is at the mucus-air interface

17
Q

What does mucus contain?

A

Mucin protein, proeoglycans, GAGs - give viscoelasticity
Serum derived proteins - albumin + alpha-1 antitrypsin + alpha-1 proteinase inhibitor
There are also antiproteases that have been secreted by the epithelia.
Anti-oxidants

18
Q

What proportion of epithelial cells are ciliated cells?

A

80%

19
Q

How do ciliated cells change in smokers?

A

Ciliated cell are severely depleted
Beat asynchronously
Ciliated cells found in bronchioles (though reduced in airways)
Unable to transport thickened mucus - smoker’s cough

20
Q

Give two characteristics of small airways.

A

< 2 mm in diameter

NOT cartilaginous

21
Q

What are clara cells?

A

Non-ciliated secretory epithelia found in the large, central and small airways and bronchi and bronchioles

22
Q

How are clara cells distributed throughout the respiratory system?

A

They increase in proportion distally

23
Q

What is the major role of clara cells?

A

Xenobiotic metabolism (ie drug metabolism)

24
Q

What are the two classes of enzymes produced by clara cells and what do they do?

A

Phase 1 and Phase 2 - they are meant to be involved in metabolising foreign substances but they are also implicated in oncogenesis.
Phase 1 enzymes convert procarcinogens to carcinogens
Phase 2 enzymes conjugate the carcinogens to make them inactive
Clara cells also produce antiproteases and lyoszyme.

25
Q

What are the diseases in COPD?

A

bronchitis + emphysema + small airways disease

26
Q

What do stromal fibroblasts do?

A
  • make ECM
  • make collagen and elastin to give alveolus elasticity and compliance
  • divide to repair
27
Q

How do numbers of macrophages and neutrophils change in smokers and during infection?

A

Increase 5-10 fold

Neutrophils become more predominant than macrophage

28
Q

What do alveolar macrophages do and what proportion of total phagocytic cells in a normal lung consist of macrophages?

A

70% of total phagocytic cells in normal lung