Topic 53 - Secretion and regulation of gastric juice Flashcards
1
Q
Words to include in gastric secretion
A
- Tubular glands of corpus and fundus
- Mucin rich fluid
- Gastric mucosa
- Intrinsic factors
- Cobalamin (Vitamin B12)
-
Regions of the gastric mucosa
-
Aglandular region
- Microbial digestion (Ru)
- Cardia
- Mucin
- Fundus
- Hydrochloric synthesis
- Pepsinogen synthesis
- Pylorus
- Mucin
- Pepsinogen
- Gastrin
-
Aglandular region
- Chief cells
- Pepsinogen
- Granules
- Pepsin
- Phe, Try, His amino acids
- Histamine
- Parietal cells
- HCl
- Luminal surface
- canaliculi
- H-K pump
- Lumen
- Acetylcholine
- N. vagus
- Gastrin
- G-cells
- Histamine
- H-cells
- Neck cells
- Gastric mucosa
- Mucin
2
Q
Words to include in regulation of gastric juice secretion
A
- Cephalic phase
- N. vagus
- Gastric phase
- Stretch- and chemoreceptors
- Acetylcholine
- Gastrin
- Histamine
- Muscarine type acetylcholine receptor (m-ACh)
- Gastrin receptor
- H2 type receptor
- cAMP level
- Intestinal phase
- Duodenum
- Gastrin secretion
- Positive feed back
- Polypeptide (entero-oxyntin)
- Negative feedback
- Secretin
- CCK (cholecystokinin)
- GIP (gastric inhibitory peptide)
- VIP (vasoactive intestinal peptide)
- Somatosin
- GI-dilation
3
Q
Topics to include in the essay
A
- Gastric secretion
- Regions of the stomach
- Function of chief cells and parietal cells
- Regulation of gastric juice secretion
- Cephalic phase
- Gastric phase
- Interstitial phase
4
Q
Give the regions with the gastric mucosa, and what are the different regions producing?
A
-
Aglandular region
- Microbial digestion (ruminants)
-
Cardia
-
Mucin
- Protection of gastric mucosa
-
Mucin
-
Fundus
- Hydrochloric synthesis
- Pepsinogen synthesis
-
Pylorus
- Mucin (protection)
- Pepsinogen (digestion)
- Gastrin (regulation)
5
Q
What does chief cells produce, and where?
A
Produce pepsinogen in fundus
6
Q
Pepsinogen
A
- Pepsinogen is stored in granules
- Its release is mainly stimulated in a parasympathetic way by n. vagus, or by low blood sugar induced by insulin
- Pepsinogen is degraded to pepsin at pH 2. (HCl)
- Pepsin hydrolyses those peptide bonds which consists of Phe, Try and His amino acids, at pH 1.8 - 3.8
- Pepsin activates other pepsinogens in a autocatalytic way
- Histamine release increase pepsinogen
- The higher the concentration of the HCl in the stomach, the higher the pepsinogen release
7
Q
Parietal cells
A
- Produce HCl in fundus
- The luminal surface of the parietal cells have canaliculi where HCl is produced
-
H-K pump can be found in the luminal membrane of the parietal cells
- H+ get into lumen
- K+ get into the cell
- HCl production of parietal cells is influenced by neuronal and endocrine regulation
- Receptors of the parietal cells
-
Muscarine type acetylcholine receptor (m-Ach)
- Acetylcholine (released from n. vagus)
-
Gastrin receptor
- Gastrin (released from G-cells)
-
H2 type receptor
- Histamine (produced by H-cells)
-
Muscarine type acetylcholine receptor (m-Ach)
8
Q
Neck cells
A
- Epithelial cells of gastric mucosa
- Secrete mucin in antrum
9
Q
Role of mucin
A
protective role against the strongly acetic gastric juice, protects the wall from “self-digestion”
10
Q
Give the phases of the regulation of the gastric secretion
A
- Cephalic phase
- Gastric phase
- Interstitial phase
11
Q
Cephalic phase
A
- Food gets into the mouth and gastric secretion occurs
- Food in the mouth stimulates the taste buds → afferentation CNS
- Efferentation gets to the stomach → gastric juice secretion
-
N. vagus cause an increase in gastric secretion
- Directly: Stimulates chief cells and parietal cells
- Indirectly: Stimulating G-cells (Gastrin producing cells)
12
Q
Gastric phase
A
- Gastric content stimulates stretch- and chemoreceptors in the mucosa
- Mechanical effects stimulate the chief and parietal cells
- Chemical stimuli activate G-cells, which due to gastrin secretion indirectly increases the production of gastric secretion until the gastric H+ ion concentration reaches pH 3
- Substances regulating the HCl production of the parietal cells:
- Acetylcholine
- Gastrin
- Histamine
13
Q
Gastric phase
Explane the regulation of gastric secretion
A
- Activity of the CNS is expressed through N. vagus
- The transmitter is acetylcholine
-
G-cells synthesize gastrin
- Fund in pylorus
- H-cells synthesize histamine, which has a paracrine effect on the pareital cells
14
Q
Interstitial phase
A
- Slight increase in the gastric juice secretion if a substances get into the duodenum which induce gastrin secretion
-
Negative feedback:
- Chemical: duodenum is strongly acidic, hyperosmotic
- Mechanical: expansion of duodenum
- Hormones important for the feedback mechanism of the interstitial phase:
- Secretin
- CCK (cholecytokinin)
- GIP (Gastric Inhibitiory Peptide)
- VIP (Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide)