Exam 3 (Lecture 9) - Secretory Activities of the Pancreas Flashcards
Is the majority of the pancreas compose of endocrine of exocrine tissue?
Exocrine
What cells in the pancreas synthesize digestive enzymes?
Pancreatic acinar cells
___________ digesting enzymes are synthesized as zymogens in the same manner as _____________ synthesis in the gastric glands. Why is this important?
1) Protein
2) Pepsinogen
This is important because the enzymes are stored in vesicles (zymogen granules) near the cellular apex.
What is the anatomical pathway/function of pancreatic secretions?
1) Acinar cells synthesize large amounts of secretory proteins (digestive enzymes)
- trypsinogen
- chymotrypsin
**Digest protein
- pancreatic amylase (digests CHOs) - pancreatic lipase (digests fat)
2) After synthesis, storage of trypsinogen and chymotrypsin occurs in vesicles (zymogen granules) near the cellular apex (they are activated in the duodenum, where they digest the protein)
3) Upon stimulation, zymogen granules fuse with the plasma membrane and release their contents into the lumen of the gland
4) Zymogens travel through the pancreatic ducts and secretions are added
Name the receptors found on the surface of pancreatic acinar, centroacinar, and duct cells. How is each ligand (hormone or neurotransmitter) released?
Receptors:
- ACh
- CCK
- Secretin
Release:
- ACh = Released from nerve endings to stimulate secretion
- CCK = Released from EEC (enteroendocrine cells) in SI > interstitial fluid > bloodstream
- Secretin = Released from EEC in SI > ISF > bloodstream
What cell type does CCK stimulate?
Pancreatic acinar cells
What cell type does secretin stimulate?
Centroacinar and duct cells
What happens when all of the receptors are occupied?
When all receptors are occupied = maximal stimulation of pancreatic secretions
Describe how secretin and CCK work together. Is it negative or positive feedback?
CCK increases the action of secretin on centroacinar and duct cells
Secretin increases the action of CCK on acinar cells
Positive feedback
Discuss the clinical correlation’s of the pancreatitis case with Beatrice (Beagle).
1) Beatrice ingested an increased amount of fat content
- Increased fat consumption irritates the pancreas = pancreatitis
2) Normally, zymogens (in the zymogen granules) and lysosomes are kept separately from each other
3) During pancreatitis, the zymogen granules and lysosomes fuse, content mixes inside intracellular vacuoles, leading to premature activation of zymogens
4) Abnormal activation of zymogens leads to local damage of pancreatic cells
- Pancreas is mostly made of proteins, so the activation of the zymogens causes the pancreas to digest itself
5) Premature intracellular activation of zymogens causes additional activation of other zymogens, leading to additional pancreatic damage
6) Vomiting
Too much of what type of nutrient will give a dog pancreatitis?
Fat
What enzyme does the SNAP cPL test measure?
Pancreatic lipase
What is the function of plasma protease inhibitors? What occurs if the inhibitors are depleted? What can this lead to?
Plasma protease inhibitors control inflammation
- if depleted, free proteases activate the coagulation, fibrinolytic, and complement cascades
- can lead to shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and death
Why would ALP (liver enzyme) be elevated in a dog with pancreatitis?
With pancreatitis, the pancreas is inflamed
- the inflammation can travel up the common bile duct and get into the intrahepatic bile ducts and back
up into the canaliculi
- this then extends into the hepatocytes
- increases the release of ALP into venous blood
Why are the segmented neutrophils increased? Why are the bands (immature neutrophils) increased?
These cells are increased because they respond to acute inflammation
- the acute inflammation is due to the pancreatic cell damage by the zymogens