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tox test 2
liver
30
Biology
Graduate
03/27/2007

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Term
What are the 3 ways of looking at liver structure?
Definition
lobule, portal lobule, and acinus
Term
Describe the classic lobule model of the liver.
Definition
the classic model is the lobule - has the central vein in the middle
Term
What is the portal lobule model?
Definition
encompasses 3 lobules - has the portal canal at the center and 3 central veins as the points (makes a triangle)
Term
Describe the liver acinus.
Definition
encompasses 2 lobules - the distributing blood vessels are in the middle (the equator), and the central veins are the poles
Term
Describes the 3 zones in the liver acinus model.
Definition
1 - the middle zone - closest to the outside edge of the lobule * 3 - closest to the central vein * 2 - in the middle of 1 and 3
Term
Functionally, what is the best model for liver?
Definition
the acinus model
Term
Which zone is most affected by xenobiotics? (i.e. most likely to be damaged)
Definition
zone 3 - it gets less oxygen and nutrients and so these cells are less able to biotransform things - they get less xenobiotics, but they are much less able to biotransform what it does get
Term
What are the main functions of the liver?
Definition
glucose storage and synthesis, filtration (bacterial products), protein synthesis (albumin, clotting factors), bioactivation/detoxification, formation of bile (bilirubin, cholesterol, metals, xenobiotics)
Term
What are hepatic cords? What is between them?
Definition
cords of hepatocytes - sinusoids (filled with blood)
Term
What lines sinusoids?
Definition
kuppfer cells (macrophages), endothelial cells (allow small molecules in), and Ito cells - synthesize collagen and store vitamin A
Term
Why is the liver susceptible to toxic injury?
Definition
because it is the first organ to receive ingested toxins like metals, drugs, vitamins, etc
Term
What is bile?
Definition
a yellowish fluid that contains bile salts, bilirubin, cholesterol, phospholipids, metals, and other things
Term
What are the functions of bile (3)?
Definition
help in the uptake of nutrients from the small intestine, protection of the small intestine from oxidative insult, and the excretion of compounds (endogenous and xenobiotic)
Term
How is bile transported?
Definition
hepatocytes transport it to the canalicular lumen - these connect to larger ducts that eventually empty into the bile duct
Term
Where is bile stored?
Definition
in the gallbladder
Term
What cells have phase I and II enzymes?
Definition
hepatocytes and biliary cells
Term
Where are metals taken up?
Definition
across the sinusoidal membrane by facilitated diffusion or receptor mediated endocytosis
Term
Where are metals stored in the liver?
Definition
bound to proteins or lysosomes
Term
How are metals excreted?
Definition
by lysosomes through canalicular excretion - specific canalicular membrane transporter
Term
Which metals are excreted by the liver?
Definition
Cu, Cd, Se, Au, Ag, As
Term
What is Wilson's disease?
Definition
a genetic disease that results in accumulation of Cu in the liver and other tissue b/c the person can't export Cu into the bile
Term
What causes fatty liver?
Definition
it's the buildup of lipids in hepatocytes - hepatotoxins like CCl4 and ethanol can cause that
Term
What 3 patterns of cell death can be seen in the liver?
Definition
focal - random distributed death of single hepatocytes * zonal - death of hepatocytes in particular functional regions * panacinar - massive death of hepatocytes
Term
What is canalicular cholestasis? What does it result in? What is it associated with?
Definition
decrease in volume or impaired secretion of specific solutes into bile * pigment accumulation in the skin and eyes (jaundice) and urine becomes bright yellow or dark brown * cell swelling, cell death, and inflammation
Term
What is cirrhosis?
Definition
accumulation of excessive amounts of collagen ibers in response to direct injury or inflammation - after repeated insults result in scar tissue replacing heptocytes
Term
What are 3 mechanisms of liver toxicity?
Definition
disruption of the cytoskeleton, cholestasis, and mitochondrial damage
Term
How does disruption of the cytoskeleton of hepatocytes occur?
Definition
microcystin uptake into hepatocytes leads to hyperphosphorylation of cytoskeletal proteins - this leads to deformation of hepatocytes
Term
How does mitochondrial DNA damage contribute to liver toxicity?
Definition
mitochondrial DNA codes for several electron transport proteins
Term
What diseases have drugs that cause direct mitochondrial damage?
Definition
AIDS and hepatitis B
Term
How does alcohol cause liver toxicity?
Definition
it causes mitochondrial damage by shifting the bioactivation/detox balance for ethanol which leads to an accumulation of acetaldehyde within mitochondria
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