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Biochemistry
1st exam
52
Other
Not Applicable
03/12/2008

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Cards

Term
Name 3 general attributes of saliva
Definition
Clear fluid, slightly alkaline pH, viscous
Term
Besides contributions from salivary glands what else contributes to saliva?
Definition

Gingival crevicular fluid (serum proteins, WBC and their products)

Oral epithelial cells and their proteins

Oral bacteria and their proteins

Food debris 

Term
Saliva is what percent water?
Definition
99.5%
Term
What ions make up saliva and are their amounts in saliva always the same?
Definition
K+, Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+, H+, Cl-, HCO3-, I-, F-, HPO42-
Term
Name small organic molecules found in saliva
Definition
urea, hormones, lipids, DNA, RNA
Term
What is found in saliva's proteome?
Definition

huge glycoproteins (106 Daltons) to smaler peptides (1000D)

pI range 11.5-3.0

Secretory products of salivary glands

Products of B cells, PMNs, epithelial cells, and bacteria 

Term
What protective functions do saliva have?
Definition
  • Cleansing
  • Lubrication
  • Buffering (through HCO3-, HPO42-, peptides)
  • Maintaining tooth integrity during stages of
    • Post-eruptive maturation
    • Mineralization equilibrium
    • Pellicle forming
  • Maintain tissue integrity
  • Regulate oral flora  
Term
How does saliva assist with oral function?
Definition
  • Food processing
  • Speech
  • Excretion
Term
What are 2 reasons that complicate the study of gland activity?
Definition
  • Different glands differ in composition (ie parotid, SM/SL, minor)
  • Composition affected by level of gland activity (ie during sleep, awake/mouth at rest, awake/eating)
Term
Break down the cumulative daily flow rate of saliva
Definition
  • Spontaneous (asleep): 8 hr at 0.05 mL/min = 25 mL
  • Unstimulated (awake): 12 hr at 0.7 mL/min = 504 mL
  • Stimulated (eating/talking): 4 hr at 2.0 mL/min = 480 mL
Total = 1009 mL
Term
What happens to saliva composition with stimulation?
Definition
  • P, K, duct cell proteins, and immunoglobulins dec.
  • Ca, Na, Cl, bicarb, secretory cell proteins inc.
Term
Which gland dominates output at low level of stimulation?
Definition

Submandibular (62%) (with parotid at 25% and sublingual at 5%)

[sublingual and minor always maintain at ~5% and 8% respectively, irregardless of level of stimulation]

Term
What happen to saliva makeup as level of stimulation increases?
Definition

More parotid and less submandibular (with sublingual and minor the same)

  • Low stim parotid 25% and SM 62%
  • Moderate stimulation parotid 35% and SM 53%
  • High stim parotid 44% and SM 44%
Term
What are some research design issues working with saliva?
Definition
  • Glandular (harder to get) or whole (easier to get, messier, more representative)?
  • Stimulated or resting?
  • What time of day?
  • How to control for variation in flow rate?
Term
What are causes of profound xerostomia?
Definition

Head and neck radiotherapy for cancer

Absence or surgical removal of salivary glands

Inflammatory disease (Sjogrens, autoimmune, parotitis)

 

Term
How many drugs have xerostomia as a side effect?
Definition
1800
Term
Give examples of drugs with xerostomia as a side effect.
Definition
  • Opiates
  • Anti-cholinergics
  • Anti-depressives
  • Anti-hypertensives
  • Anti-histamines
  • Bronchodilators
Term
Is there a direct correlation between aging and xerostomia?
Definition
No
Term
3 clinical strategies to deal with xerostomia:
Definition
  1. Drugs to stimulate flow
  2. Artificial salivas
  3. Gland repair/replacement
Term
What type of receptors mediate innervation for salivary stimulation?
Definition
G protein coupled receptors
Term
What type of parasympathetic receptors? What type of sympathetic receptors
Definition
M3 muscarinic receptors; Beta 2 adrenergic receptors
Term

What pathway mediates the muscarinic messages and what is its major effector?

And for adrenergic messages?

Definition
  • Phospholipase C - IP3 pathway with Ca2+ as an effector
  • Adenylate cyclase -cAMP pathway with effectors activated by phosphorylation cascade

 

Term
How is water secretion driven?
Definition
By osmotic changes (ionic fluxes) from basolateral surface to apex (lumen)
Term
What are some of the ion pumps and channesls in the basolateral and lumenal surfaces?
Definition
  • Basolateral
    • Na-K-ATPase
    • Ca2+ activated K+ channel
    • Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter
    • Na-H exchanger
    • Cl-HCO3- exchanger
  • Lumenal
    • Ca activated Cl channel
    • HCO3 channel
Term
How does water cross the apical membrane?
Definition
  • Through aquaporin family of water channels (Aqp5 = salivary aquaporin)
  • Ca activated open to let water out
Term
When saliva enters the lumen is it isotonic or hypotonic? And the mouth?
Definition
Isotonic; hypotonic
Term
What happens in the striated ducts?
Definition
Reabsorption of Na and Cl
Term
At what point in the modification of saliva do drugs usually interfere and what is a key receptor in this?
Definition
During water secretion; M3
Term
How is M3 involved in xerostomia?
Definition
  • Autoantibodies to M3 in some Sjogren's patients
  • Agonists can be useful in profound xerostomia treatment
  • Anti-cholinergics will most likely induce xerostomia side effects 
Term
What is one approach to repairing damaged salivary glands? How is it carried out
Definition
Gene therapy; through viral transfection of genes into host cells
Term
Why are genes transfused into ducts?
Definition
Because ducts are best preserved in Sjogren's and radition
Term
What was the effect of transfecting aquaporin into rat duct cells?
Definition
Increased salivary flow, but only short term and only replaced water; would need to replace many genes for  full repair
Term
What are 3 steps in tissue engineering?
Definition
  1. Create biocompatible scaffold (with ductlike structure)
  2. Seed with cells that function like secretory/duct cells or induce differntiation in stem cells
  3. Implant into patient
    1. This must induce vasclarization and innervation
Term
What are the steps in exocytosis?
Definition
  1. Endoplasmic reticulum - translation/glycosylation
  2. Golgi - more extensive glycosylation
  3. Condensing vaculole- packaging, condensation
  4. Immature granule - sorting, major branching pt
  5. Secretory granule - protein storage
  6. Beta adrenergic stimulation
    1. Docking, membrane fusion, and exocytosis
Term
What is the immediate and long term response to noradrenaline?
Definition

Immediate - docking and fusion to release granules

Long-term - transcription, translation, glycosylation, new granules 

Term
What membrane proteins mediate docking and fusion of secretory granules?
Definition

V(esicle)-SNARES on granule

T(arget)-SNARES on inner apical membrane

(this process is Ca dependent) 

Term
What protein pathways are sources  of proteins in basal/resting secretions?
Definition
Constitutive-like pathway ad minor regulated pathway
Term
What protein pathway is always activated (no stim required)?
Definition
Constitutive-like pathway; branches from immature granules
Term
How is the minor regulated pathway stimulated?
Definition
Low levles of M3 cholinergic agonists and vesicle membrane contains t-SNARES
Term
What is the goal of proteomics?
Definition
Identify and catalog every protein in a biological system
Term
Why is the proteome useful?
Definition
Can compare proteome patterns in cancer vs. control; virulent vs. avirulent bacteria; subjects w/ and w/o disease
Term
What does amphifunctional mean?
Definition
Helps both host and microbe
Term
What are 3 key proteomics technologies?
Definition
  1. Separating along 2 dimensions
  2. Mass spec
  3. Bioinformatics
Term
What is bioinformatics?
Definition
computer based identification of digested peptide patterns taken from info from human and all other genomes
Term
What does mass spec do?
Definition
Gives exact MW of peptides in a trypsin digest
Term
Differntiate between 1D and 2D.
Definition
  • 1D - bands based on MW only
  • 2D - separated based on MW and isoelectric pt (IEP)
Term
Why is saliva good for use as a biomarker?
Definition
  • Non-invasive collection
  • Broad range of potential analytes
    • Bacteria
    • Salivary ions
    • Secreted salivary proteins
    • Inflammatory mediators
    • Proteins, metabolites from other parts of body
    • Nucleic acids
Term
A biomarker must be associated with:
Definition
active presence of disease or future risk of disease (no direct etiological relationship need occur)
Term
What bacteria are biomarkers for caries risk in some tests?
Definition
Lactobacilli and s. mutans
Term
What is the general problem for biomarkers for caries?
Definition
High sensitivity (ability to detect people with caries risk), low specificity (lots of false positives)
Term
What other oral diseases besides caries have tests aimed at identifying biomarkers?
Definition
Candidiasis, perio,
Term
What is the biomarker focus for perio?
Definition
Givngival crevicular fluid
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