Title: Tissue Types Module
1Tissue Types Module
2Real mammalian cells (brain) - many sizes and
shapes
Image Wheater
3Basic methods of microscopy
- Method Used for seeing
-
- Light microscopy Tissues, cells,
- (LM) larger organelles
- Transmission electron Organelles,
- microscopy membranes,
- (EM or TEM) large molecules
- Scanning electron Tissues, cells,
- microscopy (SEM) organelles
4scale
- Light microscopy
- Most things measured in micrometres
- Micrometers (µm) - one millionth of a metre.
-
- Electron microscopy
- Most things measured in nanometres
- Nanometers (nm) - one thousand-millionth (10-9)
of a metre. Note nano- 9
5scale
- Light microscopy
- -Cells 25 µm (range 6-100)
- -Nuclei 10 µm (5-20)
- -Red blood cell 8 µm
- Electron microscopy
- -Mitochondria 300 nm wide (200- 400) x
3 µm (2-6) - -Ribosomes 15 nm
- -Unit membrane (bilayer) 10 nm across
6Basic methods of microscopy
- Method Limit of resolution visualize
-
- Light microscopy 0.5 mm Tissues, cells,
- (LM) (best) larger organelles
- Transmission electron 0.1 nm Organelles,
- microscopy membranes,
- (EM or TEM)
- large molecules
- Scanning electron 10 nm Tissues, cells,
- microscopy (SEM) organelles
- 1 mm 1000 mm. 1mm 1000 nm
7The commonest stain Haematoxylin Eosin, H E
- Haematoxylin
- - a purple-blue basic dye.
- -stains acidic macromolecules DNA (hence
nuclei), RNA, hence cytoplasm of cells with
very many ribosomes (e.g. in glands) some
proteins. - Eosin
- - a pink acidic dye.
- - stains basic macromolecules muscle cell
proteins, collagen (a major extracellular
protein), cytoplasm of most cells.
8Example of section stained with H E
Small blood vessel
Cell nuclei are purple. E very flat nuclei in
blood vessel wall.
Image Wheater
9Cytoplasm (pink)
Nuclei (purple)
10Example where haematoxylin stains cytoplasm
Secretory cells of pancreas. These are in groups
like hollow balls (acini). Cytoplasm at outside
of acini (cell base) is purple. Why?...
Image Wheater
11Diagram of a secretory cell
Haematoxylin can stain cytoplasm because of
Rough endoplasmic reticulum at base of cell -
organelle with much RNA
Image Bloom Fawcett
12Immunostaining -Very specific.
Uses antibodies to pick out specific molecules.
13What is extracellular matrix?
- The part of a tissue that is outside the cells.
- Usually a gel-like ground substance strengthened
by fibrous proteins
cell
Fibrous protein
Ground substance
14The 5 basic tissue types
- Tissue Nature Usual colour with H E
- Epithelium Sheets of cells. Purple. Cellular -
many nuclei.(Barriers.) - Connective Supports and Pale pink to white.
- tissue links other tissues Mostly extracellular
matrix, usually. - Blood Blood cells, plasma Red to pink
- Muscle Contractile tissues Bright pink
- Neural tissue Nerves Pale pink. Mostly
cytoplasm, high lipid content (white).Central
nervous Purplish. Many nuclei, ribosomes.system
15Epithelia
- epithelium cohesive sheet of cells.
- - It rests on a basement membrane, a thin, dense,
mesh-like layer of extracellular matrix. This
separates it from all other tissues, including
its blood supply. - - Epithelial cells are cohesive because joined
to neighbours by continuous bands of
junctional complexes. - (See Ultrastructure session.)
16Epithelium (flat or squamous type) on basement
membrane
BM basement membrane
17Epithelial cells
18Classification of epithelia by cell shape
- Note that these classes merge into each other
- Squamous flat cells. Can be so flat that
cytoplasm is invisible in sections. - Cuboidal cell height is similar to width.
- Columnar cell height at least 2 x width.
19Classification of epithelia by layers
- Simple 1 layer of cells, all touching basement
membrane. - Stratified 2 or more layers of cells.
- Pseudostratified A kind of simple epithelium
that looks stratified (pseudo-, false) because
nuclei are at different levels however all cells
touch basement membrane. (Found in the
respiratory system.) - Transitional A special kind of stratified
epithelium found only in the excretory system
not considered further this term.
20Simple squamous epithelium
BM basement membrane
Images Wheater
Face-on view.N nucleus.
E squamous epithelium
21Function of epithelia All epithelia form some
kind of barrier or containment. Simple
squamous epithelium is found where exchange
across the epithelium is important, e.g. -
lining of blood vessels, - lining of the
air-sacs of the lung.
22Simple cuboidal columnar epithelia
CuboidalRoundish nuclei
ColumnarSausage-shaped nuclei
Images Wheater
23FunctionsSimple cuboidal epithelia form
glands, the liver and much of the kidney. These
cells often secrete or transport fluids or
solutes.Simple columnar epithelia - like
cuboidal, but where wear and tear occurs -
reserve cells needed. E.g. intestines.
24Stratified (squamous) and pseudostratified
epithelium
Images Wheater
Stratified squamous (skin) - flat cells only in
upper layers
Pseudostratified - all cells touch base, but
nuclei at different levels
25FunctionsStratified squamous epithelium
Protection against friction, barrier to diffusion
or water loss - e.g. skin, oesophagus.Pseudostr
atified epithelium like an extreme form of
columnar epithelium - more reserve cells. E.g.
trachea.
26IMPORTANT POINTS
- Epithelia never contain blood vessels
- Epithelia are the tissues from which the most
common cancers (carcinomas) develop
27Definition
- Connective tissues (CT) Function
- support tissue
- (not only mechanical)
- surround tissues
- Give the body form.
- Eg. Bone
Image Moore
28Image Moore
- Blood vessels and nerves reach tissues or organs
that they supply via the CT.
muscle
Transverse section of arm
29Ridiculously oversimplified diagram of early
embryo
mesoderm
Most connective tissues in mammals develop from
the middle layer of the early embryo -mesoderm.
ectoderm endoderm
30What is extracellular matrix reminder?
- As the name suggests, its the part of a tissue
that is outside the cells. (Latin, extra,
outside). - Usually a gel-like ground substance strengthened
by fibrous proteins
cell
Fibrous protein
Ground substance
31- Unlike other tissue types, connective tissues
typically contain a high ratio of extracellular
matrix (ECM) to cells. - ECM is secreted by cells, which are embedded in
it. - ECM varies for different tissues depending on
their function. Examples of these different ECMs
are- - the hard part of bone, the tough part of
fascia, the resilient part of cartilage.
32General components of ECMs
- Fibrous proteins, and
- Ground substance
33General components of ECMs
- Fibrous proteins, and
- Ground substance - a gel containing
- water, salts etc (tissue fluid) and
- 3 kinds of molecules containing carbohydrate
- a glycosaminoglycan or GAG,
- proteoglycans and
- glycoproteins
34So what are those?
1. GAGs (glycosaminoglycans) long unbranched
polysaccharide chains with disaccharide repeat
(XYXYXYXYXY. etc ) Only one GAG is found
unlinked to protein HYALURONAN. (Very large
molecule, abundant in many connective tissues.)
Image Alberts et al.
35- 2. Proteoglycans GAGs covalently linked to a
protein core.
Image Alberts et al.
36- Proteoglycans can form enormous complexes.
Aggrecan aggregate
1µm
Actual (elec. microscopy) Images Alberts et al.
37- GAGs (and proteoglycans) attract positive ions
(e.g. Na) as they are anionic (many negative
charges). - GAGs attract water by osmosis ? giving
resilience (resistance to pressure) - e.g. in
cartilage (much aggrecan).
38- 3. Glycoproteins
- They are proteins with polysaccharide chains
attached, but no GAG chain. - Lower carbohydrate content than proteoglycans.
- Various functions including providing fibrous
webs for cell attachment and migration.
39Components of ECM
- Ground substance and
- Fibrous proteins
40Fibrous proteins
- These are proteins that aggregate together to
form very long fibres, visible by light
microscopy. - There are just two kinds in ECM
- collagen fibres - providetensile strength
(strength when pulled), - and elastic fibres - provide elasticity.
41Collagen
- The most abundant extracellular protein
- 25 of all protein mass in mammals.
- Nearly pure in tendon.
42Type I collagen, the commonest type, forms
banded fibrils as seen by electron
microscopy.(L, longitudinal section T,
transverse.)
Fibril
Image Wheater
43Banded collagen fibrils aggregate into collagen
fibres it is these that can be seen with the
light microscope (NB this is still EM).
Fibre
Cell
Fibrils
Image Wheater
44This connective tissue has quite a lot of
collagen fibres.Collagen stains pink with HE.
The nuclei here (purple) are those of
fibroblasts, the basic cell type of connective
tissue, which make the collagen. The fibroblast
cytoplasm is pink and generally cannot be
distinguished from the collagen fibres.
Collagen fibres
Fibroblast nucleus
Ground substance
Image Wheater
45Elastin
Elastic fibre
- Form a random coil when relaxed
- straighten when pulled.
- covalently crosslinked together to make elastic
fibres or sheets.
Single elastin molecule
Cross-link
Image Alberts et al.
46EVG stain (Elastic-Van Gieson) to show elastic
fibres
- This connective tissue in skin contains
- much collagen (red with EVG) and
- some elastic fibres (black/dark with EVG)
Elastic fibre
Image Wheater
47With HE, elastic fibres just stain pink like
collagen and cannot be distinguished. However,
sheets of elastin (as in the wall of this artery)
can be seen in transverse section as continuous
pink lines (E).
cell nucleus
Image Wheater
48Classes of CT
- Rigid (or skeletal)
- Soft (flexible supporting tissues)
49Rigid connective tissues
- Bone and cartilage are closely related
- most bone is formed from a cartilage model
which develops first in the embryo. -
- The bones of children still have some cartilage
areas, as in the X-ray image.
Cartilage - transparent to X-rays
Image Moore
50- In both, it is the ECM that is hard or rigid.
- The strength of cartilage is provided by high
concentrations of normal ECM components,
especially collagens and proteoglycans. - Bone ECM contains these too, plus the mineral
hydroxyapatite (a calcium phosphate hydroxide).
51Both cartilage and bone contain cells that
secrete and maintain the ECM. These are
calledChondrocytes in cartilage,Osteocytes
in bone.
What makes this matrix?
52Cartilage, containing chondrocytes (HE)
Chondrocytes- Roundish or semicircular - often in
2s or 4s.
Matrix
Image Ross
53Bone, containing osteocytes (HE)
Osteocytes - generally single, oval, shrunken
(during preparation)
54Types of soft connective tissues
- Loose CT or areolar tissue
- A cushioning or filling tissue resilience with
some strength. - Dense CT - almost entirely made of collagen
fibres - Dense regular CT collagen fibres parallel
(mainly tendons, ligaments). Very strong in one
direction. - Dense irregular CT fibres run in all directions
(e.g. in skin, muscle sheaths). Strong in all
directions. -
- There are also intermediate forms.
55Loose connective tissue (stars)
bv
56Dense irregular connective tissue(in skin)
collagen fibres
57Dense regular connective tissue(tendon)
Tensile strength in one direction
58Cell types of soft CTs, functions
- Dense CT Fibroblasts only.
59Cell types of soft CTs, functions
- Loose CT
- (a) Resident cells (stationary)
- Fibroblasts secrete maintain the ECM.
- Adipocytes fat cells. Energy store, cushioning,
electrical insulation (nerves). - Macrophages phagocytic. Remove defunct cells
matrix, foreign material organisms. Role in
immune response. - Mast cells role in inflammation (also in
allergy). Derived from blood basophils. - Plasma cells antibody production.
- Lymphocytes immune response.
60Cell types of soft CTs, functions
- (b) Transient cells (come go)
- Neutrophils defensive.
- Eosinophils defensive.
61Lymphocytes (arrow)
62Fat cells
N nucleus of fat cell, C blood
capillaries
63Mast cells (arrowheads) near blood vessel