DIGESTIVE
TRACT
Department of Histology, Cytology and Embryology
Tatiana Globa
State University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Nicolae Testemitanu”
BASIC PLAN OF THE DIGESTIVE TUBE
Four functional layers:
Tunica mucosa: This layer is composed of epithelium, connective
tissue and muscle. These tissues can usually be found in distinct
layers as follows:
lamina epithelialis mucosae: consists only of epithelium
lamina propria mucosae: consists of either loose areolar or reticular
connective tissue
lamina muscularis mucosae: consists of smooth muscle
Tunica submucosa: consists of loose connective tissue, nerves, blood
vessels, and glands in some organs
Tunica muscularis: consists of at least two layers, an inner circular
and an outer longitudinal with parasympathetic ganglia located
between the layers
Tunica adventitia or tunica serosa:consists of loose connective
tissue.
Esophagus:
The esophagus connects the
oral cavity with the stomach
allowing and aiding in the
movement of food particles
to the stomach.
It is a muscular tube having
the layers described above
for the typical tubular organ.
In the esophagus the layers
are specialized for the
function of further
fragmenting food particles.
Layers of the esophagus
Tunica mucosa:
epithelium: consists of stratified squamous epithelium that
can be highly folded in an empty organ;
lamina propria: consists of loose connective tissue,
contains esophageal cardiac glandsthat are simple
branched tubular glands, they produce mucus, mucin,
chlorides and some biologically active substances.
lamina muscularis mucosae: consists of longitudinally
oriented smooth muscle fibers that form 1 layer (can be 2)
Tunica submucosa: consists of loose connective tissue that is
very elastic allowing for expansion when food is present;
contains esophageal glands proper; they are compound
tubuloalveolar glands, which produce mucous.
Layers of the esophagus
Tunica muscularis: consists of smooth and/or skeletal
muscle;
Proximal end–skeletal muscle cells
Middle region–skeletal plus smooth muscle
Distal end–smooth muscle cells
inner circular layer
outer longitudinal layer
Tunica adventitia/serosa: consist of typical loose
connective tissue that blends into the connective tissue of
surrounding tissues. Serosa: only at distal end that enters
peritonealcavity.
Esophageal
glands proper
(submucosal,
tubuloalveolar
glands;
acidic mucus
secretion)
Esophageal
cardiacglands
not shown
Present in lower
portion; tubular
mucosalglands
produce mucus with
neutral pH
Gastro-Esophageal junction
Comparative characteristic of the wall structure of
esophagus and stomach
Esophagus Stomach
Mucosa
Epithelium
Stratifiedsquamousnonkeratinized Simplecolumnarglandular
Lamina propria of mucosa
Containsesophagealcardiacglandsthat
aresimplebranchedtubularglands.
Theyproducemucus,mucin,chlorides
andsomebiologicallyactivesubstances.
Contains gastric glands that are simple
branched tubular. Differ 3 groups of
glands:
1.cardiac glands in the cardiac region
2.pyloric glands in the pyloric region
3.fundic or gastric glands in the fundic
region.
Muscularis mucosae
Consists of longitudinally oriented
smooth muscle fibers that form 1 layer
(can be 2)
Consistsof3layersofsmoothmuscle:
Inner–circular
Middle–longitudinal
Outer–circular
STOMACH
Structure -4 Regions
Cardia
Fundus
Body
Pylorus
Functions:
Continue digestion ofcarbohydrates started inmouth
Add acidic fluid
Transform food into chyme(mechanical & chemical
breakdown)
–Promote initial digestion ofproteins (via pepsin) and
triglycerides (via lipase)
STOMACH
Cardiac region–surrounds the cardiac
orifice
Fundus–dome-shaped region beneath the
diaphragm
Body–midportion of the stomach
Pyloric region–made up of the antrum and
canal which terminates at the pylorus
Thepylorusiscontinuouswiththeduodenum
throughthepyloricsphincter
The inner surface of
the stomach is
irregular. There are:
•Rugae–are
longitudinally
oriented folds
•Gastric (mamillated)
areas–are bulging
irregular areas
•Gastric pits–funnel-
shaped depressions.
Gastric glands empty
into the bottom of the
gastric pits
GASTRIC PITS
Layers of the TUNICA MUCOSA
Epithelium: consists of simple columnar epithelium that
forms branched, tubular glands; organized into gastric pits
that open onto the lumen and gastric glands that empty
into the base of the gastric pits
Lamina propria: consists of loose areolar connective
tissue that in the glandular stomach is minimal between
gastric glands and difficult to see in sections; highly
vascular containing many blood and lymphatic capillaries
Lamina muscularis mucosae: consists of several layers
of smooth muscle oriented both longitudinally and
circularly; usually not very thick
STOMACH
Tunica submucosa: typical loose connective tissue
contains submucosal plexuses also known as
Meissner's plexuses
Tunica muscularis: 3 layers of smooth muscle
Outer longitudinal
Middle circular
Inner oblique
between the muscle layers is located the myenteric or
Auerbach's plexus
Tunica serosa: small amount of loose connective
tissue with overlying simple squamous epithelium or
mesothelium
Epithelium
simple
columnar
glandular
of the
stomach
mucosae
Gastric
glands
simple
tubular
few
branched
Glands of the Stomach Fundus and Body
Mucousneckcells–founddispersedbetweentheparietalcells;secretsa
mucusthatisthinnerthanthatsecretedbythesurfacemucouscells;mucus
protectsotherglandularcellsfromactionofproteasesandHCl.
Parietalcells(oxynticcells)–foundthroughoutthegastricgland;round
cellsthatcontaindistincteosinophilic(pink)cytoplasmandround,prominent
nucleus;SecreteHClandintrinsicfactor,neededforabsorptionofvitamin
B12intheileum.
Chiefcells(zymogeniccells)–foundmostlynearthebaseofthegastric
glands;verybasophilic(purple)containingbasallypositionednucleusand
prominentbasophilicapicalcytoplasmfilledwithmanyribosomes;secrete
pepsinogen,whichisactivatedtopepsinbyHClinthestomach.Pepsinisan
enzymewhichisabletobreakdownproteins.
Endocrinecells–difficulttodistinguishbyconventionallight
microscopy;Severaltypesarepresent;somesecretegastrin,glucagonand
somatostatin,histamine,endorphins,serotonin,cholecystokinin(CCK)
amongotherhormones.
Undifferentiatedcells–locatedprimarilyintheneckregion;difficultto
identifyinroutineH&Esections;undergomitosistoformmorecellsthen
differentiateintotheothercelltypespresentinthegland
Chief cells (basophilic)
Chief cell
Pepsinogen
on the apical
part of the
cell
Parietal cells (red color)
Parietal cell
Intracellular
canalicular system
Mitochondria
Endocrine cells
Type:
G-cells–gastrin –is the
principal agent for stimulating
the secretion of HCl and
pepsinogen
D-cellsproduce somatostatin.
They inhibit G-cells
EC-cellsproduce serotonin and
substanceРwhich increase
stomach activity.
ECL-cellsproduce histamine
which regulate gastric secretion
Cardiac glands
Cardiac glands are tubular, occasionally
branched glands (similar to the cardiac glands
of the esophagus), which contain mainly
mucus-producing cells. A few of the secretory
cells characteristic for the corpus-fundic
glands (chief and parietal cells) may be
present.
Pyloric glands
Pyloric glands aremore coiled than corpus-
fundic glands, and they may be more branched.
The lumen is relatively wide. A few parietal cells
may be present but chief cells are usually absent.
Shallow gastric
pits, with simple or
branched tubular
glands
Shallow gastric
pits,with branched
tubular glands
Deep gastric pits,
with branched
tubular glands
SMALL INTESTINE
Is the longest component of the digestive tract
Is divided into three anatomic segments:
duodenum, jejunum, and ileum
Functionally, it is the principal site for the
digestion of food & for absorptionof the
products of digestion
Endocrine Secretion
The bile duct and main pancreatic duct:
Join the duodenum at the hepatopancreatic ampulla
Are controlled by the sphincter of Oddi
SMALL INTESTINE
Specializations of intestinal surface
Plicae circulares: deep circular folds of the mucosa
and submucosa, most abundant in jejunum
Villi–finger-like projections of the mucosa that
extend into the intestinal lumen (epithelium plus lamina
propria)
Intestinal crypts(glands of Lieberkühn) –are
simple tubular glands between villi
Microvilli–numerous projections of apical plasma
membranes of absorptive mucosal cells and give the
apical region of the cell a striated appearance,
called striated border (brush border)
Plicae circularis
Crypts
Villi
Villi
•Finger-like
projections of
mucosa
•Contain:
-fenestrated
capillary network
-a central, blind-
ending lymphatic
capillary (lacteal)
-few smooth muscle
cells derived from
muscularis
mucosae
-myofibroblasts
•Are covered by
intestinal
epithelium –simple
columnar
SMALL INTESTINE
Layers of the Small Intestine
Tunica mucosa:
Epithelium-simple columnar
Lamina propria-loose connective tissue rich in blood and
lymphatic vessels present in the core of the villi and between
crypts
Lamina muscularis mucosae-thin layer of smooth muscle
located at the base of the crypts
Tunica submucosa: This layer blends with the lamina propria and
is typical. In the duodenum it has coiled branched glands known as
Brunner's glands, the ducts of which open into the base of the crypts.
Tunica muscularis: typical consisting of an inner circular layer and
an outer longitudinal layer
Tunica serosa: typical
The epithelium of the villus
Enterocytes(absorptive
cells)
Goblet cells–
unicellular mucin-
secreting glands,
increase in number from
the proximal to the distal
small intestine
Enteroendocrine cells
resemble those
described in the stomach
Epithelium lining the
small intestine –
simple columnar
The epithelium of the crypt
Enterocytes (absorptive cells)
Goblet cells
Enteroendocrine cells
Paneth cells–are found in the bases of
the glands. They have a basophilic basal
cytoplasm & large, intensely acidophilic
apical secretory granules. These granules
contain: the antibacterial enzyme lysozyme
(digests the cell walls of certain groups of
bacteria), glycoproteins, an arginine-rich
protein & zinc. The antibacterial action & the
phagocytosis of certain bacteria & protozoa
by Paneth cells suggest that they have a role in
regulating the normal bacterial flora of the
small intestine.
Undifferentiated cells
Goblet cell
Gut-Associated Lymphatic Tissue
Lymphatic nodules
Lymphocytes
Macrophages
Plasma cells
Eosinophils
GALT serves as an immunologic barrier
Regional variations in the small
intestine:
DUODENUM
presence of Brunner's glands in the submucosa -
compound tubuloalveolar branched glands, mixed
glands
presence of chyme in the small intestine induces
cells of Brunner's glands to secrete alkaline mucus
that neutralizes gastric acid and pepsin and
further promotes digestion
no plicae circulares
Regional variations in the small
intestine:
JEJUNUM
no glands in the submucosa
longest villi of all three regions
no lymphoid nodules
Regional variations in the small
intestine:
ILEUM
permanent aggregated lymphoid nodules in the
submucosa
shortest villi
highest number of goblet cells
LARGE INTESTINE
Regions
Cecum–Appendix
Colon
Ascending
Transverse
Descending
Rectum
Anal canal
Functions:
Reabsorption of electrolytes & water
Formation of waste
B vitamins & vitamin K synthesized
LARGE INTESTINE
Unlike the small intestine, there are no plicae circularesor villi
in the large intestine so the surface of the tunica mucosa is
more uniform and flatter than that of the small intestine.
Tunica mucosa:
epithelium-simple columnar epithelium that forms straight tubular
glands (crypts)
lamina propria-loose connective tissue that contains numerous blood
and lymphatic vessels, collagen, lymphocytes and plasma cells
lamina muscualris mucosae-present beneath the base of the crypts and
prominent; undergoes rhythmic contractions
Tunica submucosa: typical, contains Peyer’s patches which
are aggregations of solitary follicles or groups of lymph
nodules. Each pach contains from 10 to 70 nodules
The epithelium of the crypt
Goblet cells–are
more numerous than
in the small intestine
Enterocytes
(absorptive cells) -few
Enteroendocrine cells
Undifferentiated cells
Colon crypts
LARGE INTESTINE
Tunica muscularis: inner circular and outer
longitudinal layers; outer longitudinal layer is organized
into three separate bands known as taenia coli; movement
of more solid waste to the rectum
Tunica serosais typical.
Commensal bacteria reside in the large intestine and play a role in the
continued digestion of food.
Appendix
Colorectal Zone
(simple columnar
epithelium, crypts)
Anal Transition
Zone
(stratified
columnar/cuboidal
epithelium)
Squamous Zone
Pectinate line