Tissue: The Living Fabric
Download
Report
Transcript Tissue: The Living Fabric
Warm-Up
1. What is a tissue?
2. The study of tissues is called ______.
3. What are the 4 main types of tissues?
Warm-Up
What type of epithelial cell is shown below?
1.
2.
Simple Columnar Epithelium
Pseudostratified Columnar
Epithelium
3.
4.
Stratified Squamous
Epithelium
Simple Cuboidal Epithelium
Chapter 4
TISSUE: THE LIVING FABRIC
Tissue: group of cells that are similar in
structure and function
Histology: study of tissues
Types of Tissues:
1. Epithelium (covering)
2. Connective (support)
3. Muscle (movement)
4. Nervous (control)
Preparing tissues for microscopy
Specimen is fixed (preserved)
Cut into thin sections (slices)
Stained with colored dyes
Part I: Epithelial Tissue
Epithelial Tissue
“epithe” = laid on, covering
Structure:
1. Covering and lining epithelium
2. Glandular epithelium
Function:
Protection
Absorption
Filtration
Secretion
Special Properties
1. Polarity
Apical surface = exposed free surface or edge
(some with microvilli, cilia)
Basal surface = lower, attached surface
2. Specialized contacts
Fits close together to form continuous sheets
Special Properties
3. Supported by connective tissue
Rests on basement membrane
4. No blood supply (avascular)
Rely on diffusion and underlying connective
tissue for food/O2
5. Regeneration – Replace lost cells
Classification
Two names = (# cell layers) + (shape of cells)
Cell Layers: simple or stratified
Shapes: squamous, cuboidal, or columnar
Simple Epithelium
Absorption, secretion, filtration
Very thin
Simple Epithelium
Simple Epithelium
Simple squamous
Filtration, rapid diffusion
Capillary walls, air sacs in lungs, kidney filtration
Serous membranes: slick layer lining ventral body
cavity and its organs
Simple Epithelium
Simple cuboidal
Secretion & absorption
Lines ducts of glands (salivary), kidney tubules,
ovary surface
Simple Epithelium
Simple columnar
Absorption and secretion
Lines digestive tract
Microvilli, cilia
Mucous membranes:
lubricating mucus
Simple Epithelium
Pseudostratified columnar
Rests on basement membrane – false impression
(pseudo) of being multi-layered
Secretes or absorbs
Respiratory tract – cilia propels mucus from lungs
Stratified Epithelium
2+ layers, more durable
Main function = protect
Stratified Epithelium
Stratified squamous
Withstand abuse, friction
Esophagus, mouth, outer portion of skin
Stratified Epithelium
Stratified cuboidal
Usually 2 layers
Mainly in ducts of large glands (sweat, mammary,
salivary)
Sweat Gland
Esophageal Gland
Stratified Epithelium
Stratified columnar
Thick, waterproof layer
Pharynx, male urethra, lining ducts
Transitional Epithelium
Able to change shape (cuboidal squamous)
Lining of hollow urinary organs (bladder,
ureter, urethra)
Stretches when filled with urine
Glandular Epithelium
Gland: make and secrete a particular product
2 Types:
Endocrine gland: produce hormones secreted
into tissue fluid or bloodstream
Exocrine gland: secrete products into ducts
onto body surfaces or body cavities
Eg. mucous, sweat, oil, saliva, bile
Exocrine Glands
Unicellular
Multicellular
Mucus cells or goblet
cells
Duct structure
Warm-Up
What type of connective tissue is shown below?
1.
2.
Adipose Tissue
(Loose Connective
Tissue)
Cartilage
3.
4.
Blood
Bone
Chapter 4
TISSUE: THE LIVING FABRIC
Part II: Connective Tissue
Connective Tissue
Most abundant and widely distributed tissue
Main classes:
Connective tissue proper (loose & dense)
2. Cartilage
3. Bone
4. Blood
1.
Functions:
Binding and support
2. Protection
3. Insulation
4. Transport substances
1.
Classification
Variations in blood supply
Avascular (no blood) – cartilage
Poorly vascular – tendons, ligaments
Extracellular matrix
Produced by cells, secreted to exterior
Ground substance: “glue” - fills space between cells &
fibers
water + adhesion proteins + polysaccharides
Fibers: provide support
Collagen - strength
Elastic – stretch
Reticular – fine network, “skeleton” of organs
Loose Connective Tissue
Universal packing material
Subclasses: areolar, adipose, reticular
Structure: softer, fewer fibers, gel-like matrix
Functions:
Cushion & protect organs (areolar, fat)
Store nutrients (fat)
Internal framework (reticular)
Fight infection (areolar)
Cells: fibroblasts, adipocytes (fat cells)
Locations: under skin, lymph nodes, hips,
behind eyeballs
Dense Connective Tissue
Tendons & ligaments
Subclasses: dense regular, dense irregular,
elastic
Structure: mainly collagen fibers
Functions:
Elastic
Resist tension
Cells: fibroblasts
Locations: tendons (muscle-bone), ligaments
(bone-bone), lower layers of skin
Cartilage
Subclasses: hyaline, elastic, fibrocartilage
Structure: flexible, no nerves or blood
Functions:
Support
Compression
Cells: chondroblasts, chondrocytes
Locations: larynx, joints, tip of nose, ear,
intervertebral discs, rib-breastbone, knee
joint
Bone
Osseous tissue
Subclasses: compact, spongy
Structure: hard, calcified matrix; blood
vessels
Functions:
support & protect
Store calcium
Blood cell formation (marrow)
Cells: osteoblasts, osteocytes
Locations: bones
Blood
Vascular tissue
Subclasses: blood cells, plasma
Structure: fluid within blood vessels, no fibers
Functions:
Transport vehicle (nutrients, wastes, gases,
hormones)
Cells: white blood cells (leukocytes), red
blood cells (erythrocytes), platelets
Locations: blood vessels
Part III: Muscle Tissue
3 types:
Skeletal muscle
Cardiac muscle
Smooth muscle
Skeletal Muscle
Description:
Long, cylindrical
Multinucleate (2+ nuclei)
Striated (banded appearance)
Function:
Muscles contract, pull on bones or skin cause
body movements
Location in the body:
Attached to skeleton
Other features:
Voluntary control
Cardiac Muscle
Description:
Striated
Uninucleate (1 nucleus)
Branching cells – fit at junctions called intercalated discs
Function:
Propel blood through blood vessels to all parts of body
Locations in the body:
Walls of the heart
Other features:
Involuntary control
Smooth Muscle
Description:
No visible striations
1 central nucleus
Spindle-shaped (pointed ends)
Function:
Propel substances through hollow organs
Locations in the body:
Walls of organs (stomach, bladder, uterus, blood vessels)
Other features:
Involuntary control
Contracts slowly
Peristalsis: wavelike motion that moves food through SI
Part IV: Nervous Tissue
Main component of nervous system
Structure: neuron = dendrite + cell body + axon
Function: regulates and controls body
functions
Location in the body: brain, spinal cord, nerves
Part IV: Nervous Tissue
2 Major Cell Types:
Neurons
Respond to stimuli
Transmit electrical impulses
Other cells
Support, insulate, protect neurons
Tissue Repair
Wound healing
Two ways:
1. Regeneration: replace destroyed tissue by
same kind of cells
2. Fibrosis: form scar tissue (dense fibrous
connective tissue)
Depends on:
Type of tissue damaged
Severity of injury
Steps to Tissue Repair:
1. Inflammation
Capillaries become very permeable
WBC’s and clotting proteins seep into injured area
Clot prevents loss of blood (surface dries, forms a
scab)
Steps to Tissue Repair:
2. Granulation tissue forms
Delicate pink tissue with new capillaries
Connective tissue produces collagen fibers
Epithelial cells multiply over granulation tissue
Steps to Tissue Repair:
3. Surface epithelium regenerates
Surface epithelium thickens
Fibrous tissue matures – forms scar tissue
Regenerative Capacity of Different
Tissues
Extremely
Well
Moderate
• Skin epidermis • Smooth
• Mucous
muscle
membranes
• Tendons,
• Fibrous
ligaments
connective
• Blood
• Bones
Weak
• Skeletal
muscle
• Cartilage
Virtually None
(mostly scar
tissue)
•Cardiac muscle
•Nervous tissue