goblet cell
Physiology
(noun)
glandular simple columnar epithelial cells whose function is to secrete mucin
Biology
Examples of goblet cell in the following topics:
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Histology of the Large Intestine
- While both the small intestine and the large intestine have goblet cells (secrete mucin to form mucus in water), they are abundant in the large intestine.
- The crypts and intestinal villi are covered by epithelium which contains two types of cells, goblet cells (secreting mucus) and enterocytes (secreting water and electrolytes).
- This is in contrast to the stomach, where chief cells secrete pepsinogen.
- During each mitosis, one of the two daughter cells remains in the crypt as a stem cell, while the other differentiates and migrates up the side of the crypt and eventually into the villus.
- Goblet cells are among the cells produced in this fashion.
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Epithelial Tissues
- The types of epithelia are classified by the shapes of cells present and the number of layers of cells.
- The cell outline is slightly irregular; cells fit together to form a covering or lining.
- Goblet cells are interspersed in some tissues (such as the lining of the trachea).
- The goblet cells contain mucous that traps irritants, which, in the case of the trachea, keep these irritants from getting into the lungs.
- Goblet cells secret mucous into the digestive tract lumen.
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Transcytosis
- Substances are transported through the endothelial cells themselves within vesicles and this mechanims is mainly used by large molecules which are typically lipid-insoluble preventing the use of other transport mechanisms.
- Briefly the substance to be transported is endocytosed by the endothelial cell into a lipid vesicle which moves through the cell and is then exocytosed to the other side.
- Due to the function of transcytosis as a process that transports macromolecules across cells, it can be a convenient mechanism by which pathogens can invade a tissue.
- Listeria monocytogenes has been shown to enter the intestinal lumen via transcytosis across goblet cells.
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Epithelial Membranes
- The submucosal glands are a companion to unicellular goblet cells, which also produce mucus, and are found lining the same tubes.
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Mucosa
- The mucosa is the innermost layer of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, composed of simple epithelium cells.
- It is composed of epithelium cells and a thin connective tissue.
- The mucosa contains specialized goblet cells that secrete sticky mucus throughout the GI tract.
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Biofilms and Infections
- A biofilm is an aggregate of microorganisms in which cells adhere to each other on a surface.
- These adherent cells are frequently embedded within a self-produced matrix of extracellular polymeric substance (EPS).
- The patients with biofilms were shown to have been denuded of cilia and goblet cells, unlike the controls without biofilms who had normal cilia and goblet cell morphology.
- In addition, it has been demonstrated that the gonococcus can form biofilms on glass surfaces and over human cells.
- There is evidence for the formation of gonococcal biofilms on human cervical epithelial cells during natural disease.
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Microscopic Anatomy of the Stomach
- Different types of cells are at different locations down the pits.
- The cells at the base of these pits are chief cells, responsible for production of pepsinogen, an inactive precursor of pepsin, which degrades proteins.
- The secretion of pepsinogen prevents self-digestion of the stomach cells.
- Further up the pits, parietal cells produce gastric acid and a vital substance, intrinsic factor.
- Near the top of the pits, closest to the contents of the stomach, there are mucous-producing cells called goblet cells that help protect the stomach from self-digestion.
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Trachea
- It is lined with pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium cells with goblet cells that produce mucus.
- This mucus and cilia of the trachea form the mucociliary escalator, which lines the cells of the trachea with mucus to trap inhaled foreign particles.
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Anatomy of the Large Intestine
- While both the small intestine and the large intestine have goblet cells, they are more abundant in the large intestine.
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Digestive Properties of the Stomach
- The hormone gastrin causes an increase in the secretion of HCl from the parietal cells, and pepsinogen from chief cells in the stomach.
- Gastrin is released by G-cells in the stomach, via the base cells of the pyloric , cardiac , and fundic glands, in response to distension of the antrum, and digestive products (especially large quantities of incompletely-digested proteins).
- Parietal cells secrete hydrochloric acid and intrinsic factor; chief cells secrete pepsinogen; goblet cells secrete mucus; argentaffin cells secrete serotonin and histamine; and G cells secrete the hormone gastrin.