Esophageal glands | |
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Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | glandulae oesophageae |
TA98 | A05.4.01.017 |
TA2 | 2893 |
FMA | 71619 |
Anatomical terminology |
The esophageal glands are glands that are part of the digestive system of various animals, including humans.
In humans the glands are known as the esophageal submucosal glands and are a part of the human digestive system.[1] They are a small compound racemose exocrine glands of the mucous type.[citation needed]
There are two types:
Each opens upon the surface by a long excretory duct.[citation needed]
The esophageal gland is enlarged in large monoplacophoran species.[3]
The esophageal gland or oesophageal pouch is a part of the digestive system of some gastropods. The esophageal gland or pouch is a common feature in so-called basal gastropod clades, including Patelloidea, Vetigastropoda, Cocculiniformia, Neritimorpha and Neomphalina.[4]
The size of the esophageal gland of the scaly-foot gastropod Chrysomallon squamiferum (family Peltospiridae within Neomphalina) is about two orders of magnitude over the usual size.[4] The scaly-foot gastropod houses endosymbiotic bacteria in the esophageal gland.[4] Chrysomallon squamiferum was thought to be the only species of Peltospiridae, that has an enlarged esophageal gland, but later it was shown that both species Gigantopelta the gland also enlarged.[5] In other peltospirids, the posterior portion of the oesophagus forms a pair of blind mid-oesophageal pouches or gutters extending only to the anterior end of the foot (Rhynchopelta, Peltospira, Nodopelta, Echinopelta, Pachydermia).[4] The same situation is in Melanodrymia within the family Melanodrymiidae.[4] Bathyphytophilidae and Lepetellidae are also known to have enlarged esophageal pouches, however, though not to the extent of Chrysomallon.[4] Both are known to house endosymbiotic bacteria, in the case of bathyphytophilids most likely also in the esophageal glands but in the lepetellids the endosymbionts are spread in the hemocoel.[4]
This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 1146 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918).
This article incorporates Creative Commons (CC-BY-4.0) text from the reference[4]
Anatomy of the gastrointestinal tract, excluding the mouth | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Lower |
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Wall |