Epithelial cells BL4 Flashcards
What is the main difference between mucous and serous membranes?
Mucous - line certain internal tubes that open to the exterior e.g. GI tract, respiratory tract, urinary tract
Serous - thin, two part membranes which line certain closed body cavities and envelop the viscera e.g. peritoneum, pleural sacs, pericardial sac
What envelops the heart?
Pericardial sac
What develops the lungs?
Pleural sacs
What the peritoneum?
It is a serous membrane which envelops many abdominal organs
What is the difference in the histological structure between a mucous membrane and a serous membrane?
Mucous - different types of epithelial cells depending on site, lamina propria, muscularis mucosae
Serous - simple squamous epithelium (mesothelium), thin layer of connective tissue
What are the two layers of the serosa called?
Parietal (outer edge) and visceral (inner/close to organs)
Has lubricating fluid secreted by the serosa between them (serum)
How is the plurae of the lungs attached?
Visceral to parenchyma, parietal to ribcage
What is a pneumothorax?
The plurae of the lungs fill with air or blood
What is the epithelium?
Sheets of cells which are derived from all the embryological germ layers (ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm) which cover the external surface of the body and line internal surfaces, including the body’s vessels
What is the only organ that stores its product outside the cells?
Epithelial, eg. they synthesise thyroglobulin (one of biggest proteins in humans) and store it in the centre of the follicle (colloid)
What are the different types of epithelium?
Simple squamous (vasculature, lymphatics, respiratory space in lung, CNS, serosa) Simple cuboidal (ducts, absorption, secretion, barrier) Simple columnar (absorption, secretion, lubrication, small intestine, stomach) Pseudostratified (upper respiratory tract, cilia, goblet cells which secrete mucus) Stratified squamous (vagina, oesophagus, other areas that are moist and subject to abrasion) Transitional (urinary tract)
What are pseudostratified epithelia?
Epithelia in which all cells make contact with the basal lamina but not all reach the cell surface. Can be multinucleate
What does ‘keratinised’ mean?
Cells which have lost their nuclei and so are dead. These cells are collectively called the stratum corneum
What is the dermis?
Dense irregular connective tissue, has collagen and elastin bundles going in all directions
What is the epidermis?
Stratified squamous keratinised epithelium which consists mainly of keratinocytes. They make keratins (fibrous proteins) which contribute to the strength of the epidermis