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Connective Tissue The Big Connection!

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Connective Tissue The Big Connection! Chapter 4 Anatomy and Physiology Mr. Knowles Liberty Senior High School All C.T. have Three Parts 1. Specialized Cells 2. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Connective Tissue The Big Connection!


1
Connective TissueThe Big Connection!
  • Chapter 4
  • Anatomy and Physiology
  • Mr. Knowles
  • Liberty Senior High School

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All C.T. have Three Parts
  • 1. Specialized Cells
  • 2. Extracellular Protein Fibers
  • 3. The Fibers above and a ground substance -
    make up the Matrix that surrounds cells. (most of
    the volume of C.T.)

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Differences Between C.T. and other Tissues
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In general, C. T. ...
  • Found throughout the body
  • Never exposed to outside environment
  • Many C.T.s are highly vascular and/or have
    sensory receptors.

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Functions of C.T.
  • Structural framework for body.
  • Transportation of fluids and materials.
  • Protection of delicate organs.

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Functions of C.T.
  • Supporting and interconnecting other tissue
    types.
  • Store energy reserves (lipids).
  • Defending the body from pathogens.

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1. The Cells
  • Fibroblasts- most abundant, present in every C.T.
    Proper they secrete polysaccharide and
    proteins--gtground substance (very viscous) also
    secrete extracellular fibers.
  • Macrophages- part of immune system that engulfs
    pathogens and damaged cells.

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Show me a macrophage!
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1. The Cells
  • Adipocytes- fat cells store lipids in a huge
    droplet number may vary from C.T. type.
  • Mesenchymal Cells- stem cells that can
    differentiate into fibroblasts and macrophages.

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1. The Cells
  • Melanocytes- synthesize and store melanin
    (pigment).
  • Mast Cells- small mobile cells of immune system
    make histamine and heparin.
  • Lymphocytes- migrating immune cells that produce
    antibodies.

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2. The Fibers
  • Collagen Fibers- long, straight, unbranched,
    fibers of fibrous proteins rope-like, very
    flexible, yet strong. (Tendons and Ligaments)

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Collagen Fibers
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2. The Fibers
  • Reticular Fibers- same protein subunits as
    collagen branched network of fibers, thinner
    than collagen form an interwoven network resist
    forces from multiple directions stabilize
    organs.

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2. The Fibers
  • Elastic Fibers- contain the protein elastin as a
    subunit branched, thin and wavy fibers after
    they stretch they return to original length
    (elastic ligaments in vertebrae).

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What would happen if a persons elastic fibers
were not properly formed?
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Williams Syndrome- Abnormal Elastic Fibers
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The Mind Traveler Dont Be Shy Mr. Sacks
  • Williams Syndrome

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3. Ground Substance
  • Fills the space between cells and fibers.
  • In C.T. Proper, it is clear and viscous very
    thick due to proteoglycans and glycoproteins.(mapl
    e syrup)

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3. Ground Substance
  • Density slows the spread of pathogens.
  • Ex. Of Deficiency Marfans Syndrome (fibrillin
    glycoprotein)

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Marfan Syndrome- Dominant Mutation
  • Marfans Syndrome- mutation in the fibrillin gene
    (glycoprotein in connective tissue).

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A Marfans Sufferer ?
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Medical Mysteries Giants
  • Marfans Syndrome

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I. C.T. Proper- A. Loose C. T.
  • Areolar- packing material of the body.
  • Fills spaces between organs, provides cushioning,
    and supports epithelia.
  • Open framework with much ground substance to
    cushion shock.

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A. Loose C. T.
  • Loosely organized fibers- allow distortions.
  • Elastic fibers- allow resilience
  • Has extensive circulatory system. (site of
    injections, epithelia)

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Areolar Tissue
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1. Adipose Tissue
  • Most of volume is adipocytes.
  • Provide padding, cushions shock, act as
    insulator, energy storage.
  • Under skin of buttocks, sides, and breasts, fills
    bony sockets behind eyes.
  • Ex. Brown Fat in Infants.

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A Bunch of Brown Fat
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Adipose Tissue, Low Magnification
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Adipose Tissue, High Magnification
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Does the Cell Make Me Look Fat?
Stored Fat
Nucleus
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1. Adipose Tissue
  • Do adipocytes continually divide in adults?
  • How do we acquire more fat tissue?
  • Is liposuction a permanent solution?
  • Answers on p. 124, Martini, 4th Edition

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Show me some adipose tissue!
  • Discovery Body Story Series- Baby (Brown Fat in
    an Infant)
  • Oprah Video - Adipose from an Autopsy

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2. Reticular Tissue
  • Composed of reticular fibers.
  • Create a complex, 3-D network (stroma) that
    supports the cells of an organ.
  • In which direction is this C.T. strongest?

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Reticular Tissue
Reticular Fibers
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B. Dense C. T.
  • Most of the volume is fibers- collagen.
  • Two Types
  • Dense Regular C. T.
  • Dense Irregular C. T.

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1. Dense Regular C. T.
  • Collagen fibers are parallel (aligned with the
    forces applied to tissue).

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1. Dense Regular C. T.
  • a.) Tendons-cords that attach bone to skeletal
    muscle.
  • b.) Ligaments- connect bone to bone.
  • c.) Elastic Tissue-mostly elastic fibers
    (resilient) around blood vessels and elastic
    ligaments.

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Dense Regular Tissue
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Dense Regular Tissue
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2. Dense Irregular C. T.
  • Form interwoven meshwork. (Function?)
  • Strength and support.
  • Skin its strength (cured leather).
  • Capsule around organs-protection.

48
Dense Regular - Elastic Tissue
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II. Fluid Connective Tissue
  • A. Blood- specialized cells in fluid matrix has
    soluble fibers normally!
  • 1. Cells-
  • a. Leukocytes (WBCs) like neutrophils,
    eosinophils, lymphocytes-immune cells.

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Neutrophil and Eosinophil
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Leukemia
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Blood
  • b. Erythrocytes (RBCs)- transport O2/CO2
    most common cell.
  • c. Platelets- contain enzymes and other
    proteins for clotting.

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Erythrocyte
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Blood
  • 2. Ground Substance- called plasma, mostly water
    and dissolved solutes and large proteins.
  • 3. Extracellular Fibers- normally not present
    until needed to form blood clots.

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Blood Clot
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B. Lymph
  • Lymph- interstitial fluid that enters the
    cardiovascular system.
  • 1. Cells- lymphocytes.
  • 2. Ground substance- water without large
    proteins.
  • 3. Fibers- very little present.

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III . Supporting Connective Tissue
  • A. Cartilage-
  • 1. Cells- chondrocytes-only cells of matrix
    live in pockets called lacunae.
  • 2. Ground Substance- thick gel of proteoglycans
    secreted by chondrocytes.
  • 3. Fibers- are a proteoglycan collagen or
    elastic fibers.

59
Characteristics of Cartilage
  • Cartilage is avascular-chondrocytes secrete
    antiangiogenesis factor (cancer treatment drug).
  • Cartilage is slow to heal. Why?
  • Cartilage is surrounded by a perichondrium which
    is a C.T. Proper.

60
Types of Cartilage
  • 1. Hyaline- most common loosely packed collagen
    fibers flexible but tough. Function reduce
    friction between bony surfaces covers bony
    surfaces.
  • Ex. Ribs/sternum, articular cartilages.

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Hyaline Cartilage- Low Mag.
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Hyaline Cartilage- High Mag.
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Types of Cartilage
  • 2. Elastic- mostly elastic fibers resilient and
    flexible. Function provide support but resist
    distortion without damage.
  • Ex. Tip of nose, pinna of ear, epiglottis.

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Elastic Cartilage- Low Mag.
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Elastic Cartilage- High Mag.
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Types of Cartilage
  • 3. Fibrocartilage- little ground substance
    matrix mostly collagen fibers. Fibers are
    interwoven making it tough and durable.
    Function resist compression and absorb shock
    between bone-to-bone contacts.
  • Ex. Pads within knee joint, intervertebral discs.

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Fibrocartilage- Low Mag.
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Fibrocartilage- High Mag.
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Examples of Stem Cell Research and Growing
Cartilage and Bone
  • Scientific American November 1991 issue.
  • Movie Science Times
  • Scientific Frontiers Never Say Die

71
Bone (Osseous Tissue)
  • G.S. collagen fibers calcium salts (CaPO4 and
    some CaCO3)
  • Strong and flexible properties.
  • Lacunae in matrix contain osteocytes.

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Bone (Osseous Tissue)
  • Lacunae organized around a central canal
    (Haversian canal) which contains blood vessels.
  • Diffusion cannot occur through calcium salts.
  • Cytoplasm of osteocytes extend to central canal
    by canaliculi.

73
A Basic Pattern in Bone Tissue
  • Lacunae with osteocytes arranged around and
    connected to a central canal by radiating
    canaliculi- Osteon
  • Many osteons in one bone.

74
Bone (Osseous Tissue)
  • G.S. collagen fibers calcium salts (CaPO4 and
    some CaCO3)
  • Strong and flexible properties.
  • Lacunae in matrix contain osteocytes.

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Rickets
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Rickets X-ray
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Bone (Osseous Tissue)
  • Bone surfaces covered by periosteum- fibrous
    layer of C.T. attachment for tendons and
    ligaments.
  • Site of appositional growth of bone.
  • Bone is constantly remodeled- grow thicker with
    stresses.

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Osteon
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Bone-Low Mag.
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Bone-High Mag.
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Bone
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Can we ever grow tissue? What kinds of tissue
can regenerate?
  • Scientific American special issue, October 1999
  • Science Times Tissue Regeneration video
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