Epithelial cells Flashcards

1
Q

What are haemopoietic cells?

A

Blood cells, tissue-resident immune cells, and cells derived from bone marrow.

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2
Q

What are neural cells?

A

Cells that constitute the nervous system: Neurones (transmit electrical signals), and glial cells (provides neurone support and insulation - Schwann cell).

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3
Q

What are contractile tissues?

A

Skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle, smooth muscle.- Tissue with the ability to contract.

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4
Q

What are connective tissue cells?

A

Fibroblasts (many tissues), chondrocytes (cartilage), osteocytes (bones)- Connects, bind and supports tissue cells.

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5
Q

What are epithelial cells?

A

Cells forming continuous layers, layers line surfaces and separate tissues compartments- variety of alternative function- Secretion, selective absorption, protection, transcellular transport and sensing.

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6
Q

What are squamous epithelial cells?

A

Flattened, plate shape, abundant cytoplasm and small round circular nucleus.

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7
Q

What are columnar cells?

A

Arranged in columns; approximately 3000 microvilli per cell (maximises surface area for absorption). Simple columnar epithelial cells secrete molecules- enterocytes assist in molecular degradation in gut.

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8
Q

What are cuboidal cells?

A

Cuboidal: Cube-like (lines nephrons, ovaries and ducts)- main function is secretion.

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9
Q

What are stratified epithelium?

A

Multiple layers of cells

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10
Q

What are pseudo-stratified epithelium?

A

T​his epithelium appears to be multi-layered, but on close examination, the surface cells havecontactwith the basal lamina. e.g. airway (trachea and bronchi) epithelium, various ducts in the urinary and reproductive tracts.

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11
Q

What is epithelial cell polarity?

A

Different regions of the cell surface being different with discretely organised cellular contents. The discrete domains (formed by junctions) causes membrane polarity.

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12
Q

What is a lateral membrane?

A

Membrane is situated between two surfaces, membranes of adjacent membrane oppose each other

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13
Q

Why is polarity important?

A

Important for secretion of fluid, and solute transport

Directional flow and ion/cotransporter proteins

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14
Q

What are tight junctions?

A

Belt around apical lateral membrane (membranes of two adjacent cells accumulate together to form a barrier). Binding action prevents molecules from passing in between the cells.

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15
Q

What are adherens junctions?

A

Controls formation of other junctions. Junction holds adjacent epithelial cells together.

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16
Q

What are desmosomes?

A

Cell-cell anchoring junctions- provide mechanical stability as a result of strong cellular adhesives.

17
Q

What are gap-junctions?

A

Allows various molecules and ions to pass between cells. Composed of two aligned connexons. Gap junctions allow for electrical communication between cells, and passage of second messengers.

18
Q

What is exocrine secretion?

A

Exocrine secretion is the secretion of molecules within the duct or lumen

19
Q

What is endocrine secretion?

A

Secretion directly into the blood

20
Q

Which membrane do exocrine cells release secretions through?

A

Apical membrane

21
Q

Which membrane do endocrine cells releases secretions into?

A

Basal membrane

22
Q

What is constitutive secretion?

A

Secretory vesicles as they formed move directly to the plasma membrane, releasing their contents immediately

23
Q

What is stimulated secretion?

A

Stored in cytoplasm within secretory vesicles, fusing with membrane upon stimulation

24
Q

Which cells are produced within the small intestine?

A

Stem cells are present within the crypt of Lieberkuhn , replacing cells lost from the villus tip

25
Q

How does hyperproliferation occur?

A

Cell production > cell loss, cells accumulate into a thick layer known as corns

26
Q

What conditions cause hyper proliferation?

A

Frequent abrasions and pressure

27
Q

Which virus causes hyper proliferation?

A

The papilloma virus, controls stratified squamous epithelium