Epithelial cells BL4 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main difference between mucous and serous membranes?

A

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

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2
Q

What envelops the heart?

A

Pericardial sac

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3
Q

What develops the lungs?

A

Pleural sacs

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4
Q

What the peritoneum?

A

It is a serous membrane which envelops many abdominal organs

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5
Q

What is the difference in the histological structure between a mucous membrane and a serous membrane?

A

Mucous - different types of epithelial cells depending on site, lamina propria, muscularis mucosae
Serous - simple squamous epithelium (mesothelium), thin layer of connective tissue

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6
Q

What are the two layers of the serosa called?

A

Parietal (outer edge) and visceral (inner/close to organs)

Has lubricating fluid secreted by the serosa between them (serum)

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7
Q

How is the plurae of the lungs attached?

A

Visceral to parenchyma, parietal to ribcage

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8
Q

What is a pneumothorax?

A

The plurae of the lungs fill with air or blood

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9
Q

What is the epithelium?

A

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

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10
Q

What is the only organ that stores its product outside the cells?

A

Epithelial, eg. they synthesise thyroglobulin (one of biggest proteins in humans) and store it in the centre of the follicle (colloid)

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11
Q

What are the different types of epithelium?

A
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)
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12
Q

What are pseudostratified epithelia?

A

Epithelia in which all cells make contact with the basal lamina but not all reach the cell surface. Can be multinucleate

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13
Q

What does ‘keratinised’ mean?

A

Cells which have lost their nuclei and so are dead. These cells are collectively called the stratum corneum

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14
Q

What is the dermis?

A

Dense irregular connective tissue, has collagen and elastin bundles going in all directions

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15
Q

What is the epidermis?

A

Stratified squamous keratinised epithelium which consists mainly of keratinocytes. They make keratins (fibrous proteins) which contribute to the strength of the epidermis

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16
Q

What is the normal transit time of a keratinocyte from the basal layer to the stratum corneum?

A

28-40 days

In eg. psoriasis it is 2-4 days so the stratum corneum is produced in abundance

17
Q

What cells are in the epidermis?

A

Mainly keratinocytes, also melanocytes (long dendritic structures, produce melanin, on basal layer, have to use special stain, all humans have the same number of melanocytes but the amount of melanin they produce determines skin colour) and Langerhans cells (use special stain, present antigens to T lymohocytes, mediate immune reactions eg. allergic contact dermatitis, on lateral side)

18
Q

What does keratin do?

A

Prevents water loss and protects against abrasion

19
Q

Where are goblet cells found?

A

Upper RT and intestines
Don’t have cilia, have microvilli
Release mucins through exocytosis

20
Q

Where are clara cells found?

A

On the airway side of terminal bronchioles
Have club like apical surfaces, no cilia, no basal bodies
Protect bronchiolar apithelium (eg by secreting uteroglobin)
Detoxify harmful substances eg CO
Act as stem cell, can turn into ciliated cells to regenerate bronchiolar epithelium

21
Q

Where are microfold cells found?

A

Small intestine, close to lymohatic nodules
AreTrap pathogens, present to underlying dendritic cells which present to lymphocytes that reside in basal pocket that is not linked to the basal lamina to reise an immune response
Have lots of folds, sample the lumen by endocytosis
Often exploited by pathogens as point of entry

22
Q

Where are stereocilia found?

A

In inner ear, they’re the mechanosensing organelles of hair cells which respond to fluid motion for hearing and balance
Also in vas deferens, help absorb the residual sperm body

23
Q

What do the cilia and stereocilia contain?

A

Actin and myosin filaments

24
Q

What happens to your airway epithelium if you smoke?

A

First - mucus layer thickens, cilia die off (2-4 days to renew)
Chronic - goblet and basal cells proliferate, clara die, carcinogens induce mutations, fibroblasts lay down scar tissue

25
Q

How long do respiratory epithelial cells take to grow back?

A
Clara - never
Cilia - 2-4 days
Alveoli - 8 days
Goblet - 10 days
Trachea - 1-2 months
26
Q

What are some common respiratory conditions linked to smoking?

A

Acute bronchitis - cough, mucus increased, breathlessness due to inflammation, swelling, narrowing of lung airways, excess mucus in passages
Chronic bronchitis - same as acute but with irreparable damage, 2 episodes of 3 months of cough in 2 years
Emphysema - shortness of breath, airspaces widen, damage to alveoli
COPD - emphysema and chronic bronchitis
Asthma - wheeze, short breath, tight chest, cough, expiratory airflow limitation, caused by bronchospasm