Term
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Definition
no blood supply (ex. epithelium) |
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Term
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Definition
specialized extracellular matrix that anchors cells to the underlying connective tissue (lamina propria) - has 2 layers (lamina densa and lamina lucida) |
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Definition
epithelial cells specialized for secretion |
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Term
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Definition
a layer or layers of contiguous cells covering an outer surface or lining an inner surface |
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Term
What is goodpasture's syndrome? What component of the basal lamina does it affect? |
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Definition
rare autoimmune disease where patients make antibodies that bind to alpha-3 chains of type IV collagen - damages the basal lamina (type IV collagen) and epithelium causing renal failure and pulmonary hemorrhage. |
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Term
hemidesmosome: what do they contain? |
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Definition
anchor the basal membrane of epithelium to the basal lamina: contains integrins such as alpha-6 beta-4 to link the lamina to the keratin intermediate filament inside the cell |
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Term
desmosome (maculae adherens) |
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Definition
localized spot-like adhesions randomly found on the lateral plasma membranes between 2 adjacent epithelial cells |
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Term
What is pemphigus vulgaris? |
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Definition
skin blistering disease where patients make autoantibodies that bind to desmosomal cadherins and disrupt desmosomes and cell-cell adhesion. |
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Term
gap junction (intercytoplasmic junctions) |
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Definition
gap of 2 nm between adjacent cell membranes - allows communication between cells for passage of small molecules and ions; made of connexons which is a HYDROPHILIC channel made of connexins |
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Term
microvilli; found on what cells? |
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Definition
fingerlike extensions of aplical cytoplasm that results in an increased surface area for absorption. It is found on most epithelial cells but not as noticeable on absorptive cells |
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brush border (striated border) |
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Definition
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Definition
1 layer of cells (covering epithelium) |
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Term
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Definition
two or more layers of cells (covering epithelium) |
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Term
pseudostratified epithelium |
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Definition
all cells contact the basal lamna but not all of them reach the free surface (covering epithelia) |
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Definition
thin and plate-like cells |
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Term
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Definition
six sided polygon cells (like cobblestone) |
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Definition
tall and six sided polygons - look more rectangular than cuboidal |
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Term
simple squamous epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. thin platelike cells in a single layer on the basal lamina 2. inner surface of tympanic membrane, parietal layer of bowman's capsule and descending loop of Henle in the kidney, respiratory space in the lung, rete testis, smallest excretory ducts of glands, mesothelium of serous cavities, mesenchymal epithelium in CT, endothelium of walls of blood and lymph vessels 3. exchange, barrier, lubrication |
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Term
simple cuboidal epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. low prismatic cells, on the surface looks like small six-sided polygons, on the side looks like a sheet of cells that look like squares 2. small ducts of exocrine glands like the thyroid, pancreatic acini, choroid plexus, surface of ovary (germinal epithelium), thyroid follicales, inner surface of lens capsule, retinal pigment epithelia, kidney tubules 3. absorption, conduit, barrier, secretion |
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Term
simple columnar epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. tall prismatic cells, surface looks like simple cuboidal but smaller, side looks like sheet of rectangles 2. digestive tract (stomach to anus), excretory ducts of glands such as the gastric ones, gallbladder 3. absorption, secretion |
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Term
stratified squamous epithelium (non-keratinized) 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. thick, sheet; basal cells are made of cuboidal or columnar with rounded upper ends, on top of this are different numbers of irregular polyhedral cells that are more flat at the surface, superficial surface is made of thin squamous cells 2.moist surfaces, line wet cavities such as mouth, vagina, female urethra, anus, esophagus, part of epiglottis, part of conjunctiva and cornea of eye 3. barrier, protection |
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Term
keratinized stratified squamous epithelium |
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Definition
1. thick, sheet; basal cells are made of cuboidal or columnar with rounded upper ends, on top of this are different numbers of irregular polyhedral cells that are more flat at the surface, superficial surface is made of thin squamous cells; the superficial cells have keratin and are reduced to scale-like lifeless residues with no nuclei 2. skin and hard palate 3. barrier, protection 2. |
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Term
ciliated simple columar epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. tall prismatic cells, surface looks like simple cuboidal but smaller, side looks like sheet of rectangles 2. uterus, oviducts, small bronchi of lung, paranasal sinues, central canal of spinal cord 3. absorption, secretion |
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Term
What are the functions of epithelial tissues? |
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Definition
1. protection - cover and line surfaces (skin) 2. absorption (intestines) 3. secretion (glandular) 4. sensation (neuroepithelium for smell and taste) 5. contractility (myoepithelium) |
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Term
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Definition
electron dense layer of basal lamina with fine fibrils (20-100 nm) |
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Term
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Definition
(lamina rara) electron lucent layer of basal lamina between basal cell surface and lamina densa (300-400 angstroms) |
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Term
What are the functions of the basal lamina? |
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Definition
1. structural - attach epithelia to CT and organize membrane proteins 2. filtering - regulate exchange of material btwn epithelia and CT 3. regulation - bind GF's to regulate proliferation, differentiation, metabolism 4. migration - orient movement of epithelial cells |
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Term
What are the main components of basal lamina? (4) |
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Definition
1. type IV collagen 2. laminins 3. entactin (nidogen) 4. perlecan |
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Term
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Definition
trimeric coiled coil molecules with rodlike and globular domains for a 2-D network - found in basal lamina; problem in goodpasture's syndrome |
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Term
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Definition
multiadhesive GLYCOproteins for a fibrous 2-D network with collagen - in basal lamina |
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Term
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Definition
rodlike molecule cross-linking type IV collage and laminin in basal lamina to incorporate other components into the lamina |
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Term
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Definition
large, multidomain heparin sulfate proteoglycan binding and cross-linking basal lamina components and cell surface proteins; LARGEST volume of lamina; POLYANIONIC molecule that binds water and anions |
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Term
anchoring fibrils 1. what type of collagen? |
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Definition
type VII collagen fibrils in a heparan sulfate gel anchoring the lamina to CT |
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Term
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Definition
in the skin: basal lamina + underlying CT (reticular lamina); HISTOLOGICAL term |
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Term
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Definition
transmembrane receptors for proteins of the basal lamina (such as laminin)- found in hemidesmosomes |
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Term
intercellular junctions: what are the different types? |
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Definition
junctions between neighboring cells laterally for cell adhesion and communication 1. adhering junctions (zonulae adherens, desmosomes) 2. impermeable junctions (zonulae occludentes or tight junctions) 3. communicating junctions (gap junctions or intercytoplasmic junctions) |
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Term
zonulae occludentes (tight junctions) 1. appearance? 2. function? 3. composed of? |
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Definition
-apical most junction (continuous belt around cells, closed, shut, or stopped up) 1. outer leaflets of adjacent membranes appear to fuse for a local pentalaminar appearance, interlocking networks of ridges on cytosolic face of plasma membranes of each contracting cells 2. prevent diffusion of macromolecules and some small water-soluble molecules and ions between cells 3. double row of protein particles (3-4 nm) called claudins (one row from each cell) |
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Term
What is cholera? what kind of junction is involved? |
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Definition
toxins fom Vibrio cholerae bacteria alter TIGHT JUNCTION permeability barriers of intestinal epithelia by changing composition or activity of the junction. results in massive loss of ions and water into GI tract and then diarrhea and lethal dehydration |
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Term
zonulae adherens (adherens junctions) 1. appearance 2. function 3. composed of |
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Definition
located near apical surface below tight junctions (continuous belt around cell and held closely) 1. membranes are held a little loser than tight junctions (150-200 angstroms), circumferential actin/myosin belt that acts as a tension cable controlling shape 2. primary adhesive junctions between neighboring cells in epithelia 3. linked by actin filaments and intercellular space contains glycoproteins called cell adhesion molecules (CAMS) |
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Term
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Definition
meshwork of actin, intermediate filaments, and spectrin in the apical region of a cell |
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Term
maculae adherens (desmosomes) 1. appearance 2. function |
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Definition
- localized spot-like adhesions on lateral plasma membranes (adhering spot) 1. button-like points of contact between neighboring cells, more loose than adherens junctions (300 angstroms), sharply defined limits, electron-dense homogenous layer subjacent to plasma membrane in attachment plaques, contain tonofilaments 2. tight adhesion between neighboring epithelial cells, link tonofilaments between cells |
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Term
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Definition
intermediate filaments made of cytokeratins that insert into attachment plaques of desmosomes or make hairpin turns and go back to the cytoplasm |
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Term
gap junctions (intercytoplasmic junctions) 1. appearance 2. function 3. composed of |
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Definition
- found in epithelia and in almost all other tissues EXCEPT muscle 1. between adjacent cell membranes with gap of 2 nm, hexagonal protein particules in circular patches to form a channel 2. communication btwn cells for small molecule and ion exchange 3. hydrophilic channel called a connexon that is made of proteins called connexins |
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Term
What are some specializations of the free apical surface of an epithelial cell? |
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Definition
1. microvilli, stereocilia (increase cell surface area) 2. cilia (more foreign particles) 3. non-motile primary cilia (mechanosensory inputs) |
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Term
stereocilia: found on what cells? |
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Definition
long, branched, flexible, non-motile process; form a pyriform tuft - pseudostratified epithelial cells in the epididymis, ductus deferens, hair cells of inner ear |
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Term
What is the function of stereocilia? |
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Definition
1. epididymis - increases surface area of cell for greater absorption of seminal fluid. 2. hair cells of inner ear - mechanosensing organelles that respond to fluid motion or fluid pressure changes (primarily for hearing) |
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Term
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Definition
elongated, motile structures present in high numbers (250/cell); 5-10 micrometeres longs and 0.2 micrometers wide; 9 + 2 arrangement of microtubules that insert into basal bodies |
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Term
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Definition
epithelia of respiratory system such as the larynx, trachea, bronchi, and paranasal sinuses to move foreign particles such as bacteria and mucus from the lungs or nose to the exterior. |
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Term
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Definition
identical to cilia but longer and limited to one per cell with 9 + 2 arrangement and basal bodies |
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Term
where are flagella found? |
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Definition
spermatozoa in humans to function in motility |
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Term
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Definition
electron dense structures at the apical pole below the cell membrane and are structurally analogous to centrioles; found in association with cilia and flagella |
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Term
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Definition
elongated structures that do not move on their own but bend on external pressures such as fluid flow; only one per cell - renal epithelial primary cilia - 2-3 micrometers long and may reach 50 with increasing age - prominent base at insertion into cytoplasm with swelling at distal tip - 9 + 0 arrangement of microtubules into basal bodies |
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Term
where are nonmotile primary cilia found? |
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Definition
on NEARLY ALL differentiated cells of adult tissues including epithelial fibroblasts, chondrocytes, osteocytes, smooth muscle, cardiac, and skeletal muscle, photoreceptor cells, hippocampal neurons, etc. |
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Term
why are nonmotile primary cilia important? |
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Definition
contain protein products of genes that are disrupted in Polycystic Kidney Disease (polycystins) that form a fluid sensing mechanism to control the diameter of renal tubules |
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Term
How are covering epithelia classified? |
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Definition
1. number of layers of cells 2. shape of cells in the most superficial layer 3. presence of cilia on free surface or keratin in the cytoplasm of superficial layer of cells |
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Term
what is: 1. simple layer of cells 2. stratified layer of cells 3. psuedostratified layer of cells |
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Definition
1. one layer 2. two or more layers 3. all cells contact te basal lamina but not all reach the free surface |
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Term
what are the three types of cell shapes for epithelia? |
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Definition
squamous, cuboidal, columnar |
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Term
What are the 10 types of epithelia? |
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Definition
1. simple squamous 2. simple cuboidal 3. simple columnar (and ciliated simple columnar) 4. stratified squamous (non-keratinized and keratinized) 5. stratified cuboidal 6. stratified columnar 7, ciliated stratified columnar 8. psuedostratified columnar 9. ciliated pseudostratified columnar 10. transitional epithelium (urothelium) |
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Term
stratified cuboidal epithelium: 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. rare epithelium 2. excretory ducts of sweat glands, large ducts of exocrine glands, developing ovarian follicles, anorectal junction 3. barrier, conduit |
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Term
stratified columnar epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. functions? 4. ciliated stratified columnar |
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Definition
1. relatively rate 2. small areas of the fornix of conjunctiva, cavernous part of the urethra, anal mucous membranes, pharynx, epiglottis, largest excretory duct of some glands 3. barrier, conduit 4. found on nasal surface of the soft palate, larynx, transiently in fetal esophagus |
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Term
psuedostratified columnar epithelium 1. what? 2. where? 3. ciliated pseudostratified columnar 4. functions? |
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Definition
1. nuclei are at different levels and cells are variable in shape; all cells attach to basal lamina but some do not reach the free surface 2. large excretory ducts of parotid and other glands, male urethra 3. found on greater part of mucous membrane of respiratory passages (trachea, bronchi, nasal cavity), eustachian tube, tympanic cavity, lacrimal sac, excretory passages of male reproductive system 4. secretion, absorption, conduit |
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Term
What is transitional epithelium (urothelium)? 1. what? 2. where? 3. function? |
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Definition
1. varied appearance due to mechanical changes due to contraction and distention 2. in urinary system, lining the urinary bladder, the ureter and upper part of urethra 3. barrier, distensible property |
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Term
what is metaplasia? and how is it caused? |
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Definition
reversible event where one differentiated cell type is replaced with another mature differentiated cell type; an adaptation to cellular stress; NOT CANCER |
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Term
what are some examples of metaplasia (3)? |
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Definition
1. barrett's esophagus 2. airway epithelial metaplasia 3. cervical erosion |
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Term
what is Barrett's esophagus? |
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Definition
abnormal change in cells of the lower esophagus caused by damage from chronic stomach acid exposure |
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Term
what is airway epithelial metaplasia? |
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Definition
ciliated psuedostratified columnar epithelial are replaced with stratified squamous epithelia in response to cigarette smoke |
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Term
what is cervical erosion? |
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Definition
non-keratiniszed stratified squamous on the surface of the cervix is replaced with glandular columnar epitheliium in the cervical canal due to trauma, infection and certain chemicals |
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Term
what are secretory granules? |
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Definition
membrane-bound vesicles that hold secretory products |
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Term
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Definition
from epithelium through cell proliferationn and invasion of epithelium into connective tissue |
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Term
how are glands classified? (5) |
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Definition
1. size (unicellular/multicellular) 2. mode of secretion (exocrine v. endocrine) 3. type of secretion (serous v. mucous) 4. mechanism of secretion (merocrine, apocrine, holocrine) 5. morphology of ducts (simple v. cmpd) and secretory units (tubular, aveolar, tubuloalveolar) |
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Term
Unicellular glands: 1. what? 2. function? 3. where? |
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Definition
1. isolated glandular cells scattered among columnar epithelial cells of mucous membranes 2. secrete mucin (protein polysacc) that forms a lubricating solution (mucous) 3. ONLY one is the GOBLET CELL or mucous cell in mucous membranes of several tissues such as the small intestine, stomach, genital tract, respiratory tract. |
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Term
multicellular glands 1. what? |
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Definition
clusters of cells which can be mucous-secreting (mucous salivary glands), serous secreting (pancreas), or both (sublingual salivary) |
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Term
What are exocrine glands? |
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Definition
- secretions are into a ductal system - retain connections with surface epithelium - ducts that carry secretory product to the surface - discharge product at an external or internal surface |
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Term
what are endocrine glands? |
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Definition
- secrete into vascular system - no connection with surface epithelium of origin - do not have ducts and product is released into blood or lymph |
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Term
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Definition
usually pyramidal with broad base on basal lamina and narrow apical surface with short microvilli, round cental nucleus, basal part of cytoplasm is basophilic due to RER, apical part of cytoplasm contains secretory granules, zymogen granules |
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Term
what are zymogen granules? |
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Definition
contain digestive enzymes and are found in serous glands |
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Term
serous glands: 1. examples 2. alveoli 3. secretion |
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Definition
1. parotid gland, pancreas 2. adjacent serous cells form these spherical structures (acini) 3. watery and rich in enzymes |
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Term
mucous glands: 1. example 2. secretion |
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Definition
1. goblet cell and mucous salivary gland 2. viscous and contains mucous |
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Term
what is the morphology of mucous glands? |
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Definition
expanded, oval apical end filled with pale droplets corresponding to large secretory granules with mucigen, flattened nucleus in the slender basal end with a small amount of deep staining basophilic cytoplasm, well-developed Golgi above the nucleus |
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Term
Mixed glands: 1. what does it contain? 2. examples |
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Definition
1. mucous and serous cells 2. submandibular and sublingual salivary glands |
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Term
What are the three mechanisms of secretion for exocrine glands? |
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Definition
1. merocrine 2. apocrine 3. holocrine |
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Term
What is merocrine secretion? Where is it found? |
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Definition
the secretory granule fuses with the plasma membrane by exocytosis without losing the cytoplasm; most common mechanism; salivary glands and pancreas |
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Term
What is apocrine secretion? where? |
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Definition
the secretory granule + apical cytoplasm is lost; mammary glands and sweat glands |
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Term
what is holocrine secretion? where? |
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Definition
the entire cell becomes the secretory product and is shed; uncommon; sebaceous gland |
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Term
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Definition
one unbranched duct (exocrine gland) |
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Term
what is a compound gland? |
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Definition
branching duct system (exocrine) |
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Term
what are the types of secretory ducts? (8) |
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Definition
1. simple tubular 2. simple coiled tubular 3. simple branched tubular 4. simple acinar 5. branched acinar 6. compound tubular 7. compound acinar 8. compound tubuloacinar |
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Term
simple tubular secretory unit? |
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Definition
found in the large intestine and colon; secretory portion is a straight tube formed by goblet cells |
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Term
simple coiled tubular secretory unit? |
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Definition
found in the skin, eccrine sweat gland; secretory portion is a coiled tube located deep in the dermis |
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Term
simple branched tubular secretory unit? |
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Definition
found in the stomach, mucus-secreting glands of pylorus; secretory portion is branched and produces a viscous and mucous secretion |
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Term
simple acinar secretory units? |
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Definition
found in the urethra, paraurethral and periurethral glands; secretory portion is formed by small, sac-like dilations of secretory cells that develop as an outpouching of the transitional epithelium |
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Term
what is a branched acinar secretory duct? |
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Definition
found in the stomach, mucous secreting glands of the cardia; mucous secreting portions are connected to sort, single duct portions that open directly into the lumen |
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Term
what is a compound tubular secretory duct? |
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Definition
found in the duodenum and submucosal glands; coiled secretory portions are located deep in the submucosa of the duodenum |
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Term
what are compound acinar secretory units? |
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Definition
found in the pancreas, excretory portion; alveolar shaped secretory units are formed by pyramid shaped serous secreting cells |
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Term
what are compound tubuloacinar secretory ducts/ |
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Definition
found in the submandibular salivary gland, mammary gland and lacrimal gland; can have both mucous branched tubular and serous branched acinar secretory units with serous end caps called demilunes |
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Term
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Definition
tumor of epithelial cell orgin; reflects cell specific morphology and behaviors; those that are undifferentiated are hard to diagnose |
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Term
what is an adenocarcinoma? |
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Definition
tumor derived from glandular epithelial tissue |
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Term
which epithelial type is the most highly specialized to accomodate stretch? |
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Definition
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Term
an elderly male patient with chronic digestive problems involving absorption of fluid has a biopsy performed on his small intestine. What structure does the biospy report cite as being affected? |
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Definition
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Term
adenocarcinoma: from which of the following would this tumor not has arisen? (breast, prostate, salivary gland, pancreas, kidney) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the space BETWEEN epithelial cells |
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Term
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Definition
affects type VII collagen gene and causes blistering |
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Term
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Definition
between cells; transport from one cell to another |
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Term
what is flagella made of? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
found in the kidney for filtration; form of simple cuboidal cells |
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Term
what is the most common stratified epithelia? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
vascularized lamina propria that interdigitates into epithelia to deliver nutrients to deeper cells |
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Term
Which form of glandular secretion leads to cell death? which does not lead to cell death? |
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Definition
cell death = holocrine no death = apocrine and merocrine |
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Term
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Definition
flow of sebum is stopped (holocrine secretion) |
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