5 - Glands Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What is a gland?

A
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2
Q

What is a secretion?

A
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3
Q

What are the three types of secretion from glands?

A

(cytocrine is when whole alive cell is secretion like sperm)

(remember if cell membrane is transiently larger or smaller)

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4
Q

What is transepithelial transport?

A
  • Material endocytosed at one side of epithelia
  • Vesicle shuttles through cytoplasm
  • Exocytosis on opposite surface

(For molecules too large to penetrate membranes)

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5
Q

What is a unicellular exocrine gland?

A

Goblet cell

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6
Q

Where are goblet cells found?

A
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7
Q

How is mucus made?

A

Water mixes with glycoprotein mucin, released from goblet cells, to make mucus

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8
Q

What is an endocrine gland?

A
  • A gland that secretes directly into the blood
  • Secretion acts at distant parts of the body.
  • Secretions are hormones

- All cells secrete the hormones in the gland

- Ductless

e.g pituitary gland

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9
Q

What is an exocrine gland?

A
  • Secrete into region of the body through a duct
  • Secretions on surface of cell
  • Only cells at the apex of the duct secrete
  • Secretions are enzymes and lubricants
    e. g salivary, sebaceous, sweat, pancreas, mammary, lachrymal
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10
Q

What is a unicellular endocrine gland?

A

Diffuse neuroendocrine system

(can be isolated in areas like lungs or multi cellular such as islets of langerhans)

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11
Q

What is the structure of the pituitary gland and what does it secrete?

A
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12
Q

What is the point of sebaceous and lachrymal glands?

A
  • Produce sebum to protect from pathogens, e.g ear wax
  • Moisten eye and produce lysozymes to attack bacteria
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13
Q

How is an exocrine gland formed?

A

Cannicularisation (apoptosis of central cells)

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14
Q

How is an endocrine gland formed?

A
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15
Q

Why are thyroid folliles spherical?

A

Colloid produced and put in between epithelial cells causing them to expand into a sphere

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16
Q

What are different shapes of exocrine gland and some examples of the type of glands in each category?

A
17
Q

What are myoepithelial cells?

A

Epithelial cells containing actin and myosin, they help to extract secretions from cells into duct

18
Q

What are the different duct names in a exocrine gland?

A
19
Q

How can you tell the difference between serous and mucous glands histologically?

A

Serous:

  • Stain darker due to zymogen granules
  • Rounded nuclei towards base

Mucus:

  • Stain pale due to mucous
  • Flattened nuceli towards basement membrane
20
Q

What are the two types of merocrine secretion?

A

Constitutive - Secretory product not concentrated into granules, packaged and continously released from surface. Used to repopulate membrane

Regulated - Secretory granules accumlate in large vesicles and are release by exocytosis when stimulated, need influx of Ca ions. Active and contains modified proteins, e.g insulin secretion

21
Q

What happens during secretion at mammary glands?

A

Neonatal: Only fats secreted by apocrine. Proteins secreted by merocrine

Lactation (8 days after birth): Fats and proteins released by aprocrine

22
Q

What happens during secretion in a sebaceous gland?

A
  • Holocrine
  • Cells fills with secretory granules
  • Cell organelles degenerate
  • Cells die
  • Plasma membrane breaks and contents empty
  • Dead cells replaced by mitosis of basal layer
23
Q

What is the role of the golgi in secretion?

A
  • Glycosylate lipids and proteins
  • Transport through cisternae
  • Package proteins and lipids and decide their destination
24
Q

What is glycosylation and what is the role of it?

A

The covalent attachement of sugars to lipids or proteins by enzymes

  • Aid protein folding
  • Prevent protein and lipid digestion
  • Cell recognition (blood groups)
  • Adhesion to substrates and neighbouring cells
25
Q

What is glycation?

A

Binding of sugar to lipids and proteins without enzymes. Glycosylation disorders (40 of them) can cause this and can be lethal

26
Q

What are different types of endocytosis?

A
27
Q

What is the difference between paracellular and transcellular transport?

A

Paracellular is opening tight junctions and molecule (amino acids) diffuse down the side of cells. Transcellular goes through the cell by either carrier proteins or endocytosis (cholesterol and thyroxine)

28
Q

How are glands controlled?

A

- Humoral: Hormone release in response to changes in ECF

- Neural: Hormone release in response to neural stimuli (exocrines only real control)

- Hormonal: Hormone release in response to hormone released from other glands

NEGATIVE FEEDBACK

29
Q

What is neuroendocrine control?

A

Cells that recieve neuronal input, and in response they release hormones, e.g hypothalamus and pituitary gland

30
Q

What is an example of a mixed gland?

A
  • Mammary (exocrine mucus and serous)
  • Pancrease (exocrine and endocrine)
31
Q

Can glands regenerate?

A
  • Yes.
  • Liver, Thyroid and Pancreas cells cease multiplying at puberty but can multiple in tissue injury

- One exception: Islets of Lagerhans

32
Q

What is a malignant neoplasia of glandular tissue called?

A

Adenocarcinoma

33
Q

What can block glandular ducts?

A
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Localised tumours
  • Stones