Chapter 18 - Digestive System Flashcards
What are the 4 main functions of the Digestive System?
- Motility
- Secretion
- Digestion
- Absorption
- (Storage and elimination)
- (Immune Barrier)
Which type of reaction is used to break down food molecules into their monomers?
Hydrolysis
What are the four tunics of the digestive tract, listed inside out?
Mucosa, submucosa, muscularis, serosa
Which tunic of the GI tract is the inner most layer, lining the lumen of the GI Tract?
What are the 2 main functions of this layer?
What type of cells?
- Mucosa
- Absorption and Secretion
- Simple Columnar Epithelium
What tunic layer of the GI tract is the muscularis Mucosae found? What is its function?
- Mucosa layer
- Thin layer of smooth muscle, responsible for the numerous small folds in portions of the GI tract greatly increasing surface area.
- This layer of the GI tract is thick, vascular, connective tissue that serves the inner mucosa layer?
- This layer also has nerve plexuses called - submucosal plexus (or [] [] )
- Submucosa
- Meissner’s plexus
- This layer of the GI tract is responsbile for the segmental contractions and peristalitic movemetn through the GI tract.
- What are the two layers of muscle located in this tunic?
Muscularis (muscularis externa)
Inner Circular and Outer longitudinal layer of smooth muscle
In which GI tunic is the Myenteric Plexus found?
What are these Plexus function?
Does this receive parasympathetic or sympathetic innrvation?
- Muscularis - between circular and longitudinal muscle layers
- Provides major nerve supply to entire GI tract
- Includes fibers and ganglis from both sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems
What is the outer tunic of the GI tract?
Serosa
How are the Meissner’s Plexus stimulated for action?
- Independent of lower nerve net
- Stretching of the intestine will cause AP and then cause stimulation through the entire muscle
T/F
Smooth muscles cells contain lower amounts of actin/myosin with larger sarcomeres than skeletal muscle?
- False
- Contain a bunch of actin and a little bit of myosin (16 to 1)
- Contains ZERO Sarcomeres
These structure in smooth muscles are analogous ot the Z discs of striated muscle. They “anchor” the thin filaments in smooth muslce
Dense Bodies
What are the 2 components of a contraction in smooth muscles?
Slow Wave
Depolarization
What are the two functional categories of smooth muscle and how are they innervated?
What are examples of each?
-
Multi-Unit: arrector pili muscles in the skin and ciliary muscles attached to the eye
- Require much more innervation
-
Single- Unit: Most smooth muscle in digestive tract and Uterus
- Only some cells are innervated - ACh can diffuse into neighboring cells via the numerous gap junctions between adjacent cells
- Myogenic - electrical activity - contracts in response to stretching (independent of nerve stimulation)
Sustained smooth muscle contractions are produced in response to extracellular [] that diffuses through the [] into the smooth muscle cells…
- Ca2+
- Sarcolemma
On what subunit of troponin does Calcium bind to in smooth muscles?
None, Ca2+ binds with calmodulin in smooth muscles, not troponin.
The Ca2+-calmodulin complex in smooth muscle active this enzyme [], through []
- MLCK - myosin light chain kinase
- De-phosphorylation
Which enzyme phosphorylates the Mysosin cross bridges in smooth muscle and which enzyme removes the phosphate group?
- MLCK - myosin light-chain kinase phosphorylates
- MLCP - myosin light chain phosphatase removes the phosphate group
[] starts the degradation of starchs in the mouth
Salivary Amylase
Where is the automatic acti of swallowing controlled?
swallowing center of the brain
This sphincter guards the junction of the stomach and the duodenum of the small intestine?
The pyloric spinchter
What are teh 4 main functions of the stomach?
- store food
- initiate the digestion of proteins
- kill bacteria with somtach acids
- move food into the small intestine
What are 6 cell types normally found in Gastric Glands?
- Mucous Neck Cells
- Parietal Cells
- Chief Cells
- Enterochromaffin-like (ECL) Cells
- G Cells
- D Cells
What are the the 3 regions of the stomach?
- Fundus - mainly storage
- Body - Secretes mucus and pepsinogen and HCL
- Antrum - secretes a lot more mucus and pepsinogen and also gastrin
- Also is the main location for the mixture and creation of chime.
What do Mucous neck cell secrete?
Mucus
What do parietal cells secrete?
Hydrochloric Acid