Title: Tissue: The Living Fabric
1Chapter 4
- Tissue The Living Fabric
- G.R. Pitts, Ph.D, J.R. Schiller, Ph.D. James F.
Thompson, Ph.D.
2General
- Tissues - groups of cells with similar basic
structures which cooperate to perform a related
function - Four basic types of tissues
- Epithelial linings for protection,
coordination, synthesis, absorption, elimination - Connective support
- Muscle for movement
- muscle tissue is a highly specialized connective
tissue - Nervous for control and coordination
- nervous tissue is a highly specialized epithelial
tissue
3Epithelial Tissue Characteristics
- Cellularity - densely packed
- Polarity
- apical surface
- basal surface (or basolateral)
- Specialized contacts - tight junctions and
desmosomes - Supported by connective tissue
- basal lamina (epithelial glue)
- reticular lamina (connective tissue glue)
- basement membrane - reticular and basal laminae
together - Innervated but avascular (no direct blood supply)
- Regeneration high capacity for regeneration
4Classifying Epithelial Tissues
Pseudostratified epithelium (from the respiratory
tree) appears stratified, but actually is a
single layer of cells of varying heights each
cell touches the basement membrane
5Classifying Epithelial Tissues
6Glandular Epithelial Tissues
- functions in secretion a gland may be one cell
or a group of specialized cells - two major types
- exocrine glands have ducts leading to body
surfaces - various products are synthesized and stored for
release - secretions are secreted into the duct system
- e.g., sweat glands, salivary glands, etc.
- endocrine glands are ductless
- hormones are synthesized and stored for release
- hormones are secreted into the tissue fluid and
then diffuse into the blood stream - e.g., thyroid and parathyroid glands
7Exocrine Gland Classification
- Unicellular glands
- single cell glands
- goblet cells
8Exocrine Gland Classification
- Multicellular glands
- Structurally classified by duct configuration and
by the shape of the secretory units - simple glands have a single duct
- compound glands have branched ducts
- Merocrine glands
- Exocytosis
- Holocrine glands
- Cell rupture
9Connective Tissue Characteristics
- Two basic components
- Cells fewer, rarely touching, surrounded by a
matrix - immature forms (-blasts) secrete the matrix and
can still divide - once the matrix is secreted, the cells mature
into -cytes which have decreased cell divisions
and secrete less matrix material - chondro- cartilage, osteo- bone, fibro
connective, etc. - Extracellular Matrix
- ground substance (gelatinous glycoproteins)
- structural fibers (fibrous proteins, e.g.,
collagen, elastin, reticulin) - Common embryological origin (from mesoderm)
- Innervated and Vascular (direct blood supply)
- Cartilage is the one exception with no capillary
beds
10Connective Tissue Matrix
- Ground Substance
- supports cells, binds them together
- may be solid, fluid, or gel
- interstitial fluid
- Glycoproteins called proteoglycans - large
polysaccharide molecules bound to a protein core
(like a bottle brush) - Hyaluronic acid gelatinous, separates cells,
traps extracellular fluid lubricates joints
gives shape to eyeballs fills body spaces - Chondroitin sulfate capable of being
mineralized cartilage, bones, skin, blood
vessels - Dermatin sulfate harder skin, tendons, blood
vessels, heart valves - Keratin sulfate - still harder bone, cartilage,
cornea of the eyes
11Connective Tissue Matrix
- Protein fibers are embedded in the ground
substance - Used for structural support, adhesion, and to
connect cells - Provide strength and support
- Collagen fibers
- highly polymerized, gigantic molecules
- tough, moderate flexibility
- protein collagen - parallel bundles of fibers
- bone, cartilage, tendons, ligaments
- Elastic fibers (elastin)
- branched smaller, thinner fibers than collagen
- Very flexible and elastic but also strong
- can be stretched to 150 of its original length
- require special stains to be seen
- Reticular fibers
- thin, less polymerized collagen fibers
- require special stains to be seen
12Types of Connective Tissues
- Connective Tissue Proper
- areolar (loose fibrous) connective tissue
- adipose tissue
- reticular connective tissue
- dense (fibrous) regular connective tissue
- dense (fibrous) irregular connective tissue
- Cartilage
- hyaline cartilage
- elastic cartilage
- fibrocartilage
- Bone
- Blood
13Connective Tissue Types
Classified by the characteristics of the matrix
Also see Table 4.1
Details covered in lab
14Connective Tissue Diseases
- Many diseases
- Most of them very rare
- They may involve the joints but primarily affect
other organs - Cause(s) of these diseases unknown
- But in all of them, the immune system seems to be
activated and causes damage to different organs
in the body
15Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
- Symptoms skin rash, mild arthritis, and
generalized weakness or tiredness - Rarer symptoms hair loss, mouth ulcers,
headaches and poor circulation in the fingers - Serious complications of kidney, heart, and brain
inflammation - 9 times more likely in women
- 4 times more likely in African-Americans
http//www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/conditions/
lupus/index.cfm
16Marfan Syndrome
- Genetic defect on chromosome 15 that encodes the
fibrilin protein
17Nervous Tissue
- Highly specialized epithelial cells
- Convert stimuli into electro-chemical signals for
transfer of information - Structure
- cell body (soma) and extensions
- dendrites (highly branched) carry incoming
signal - axon (long, usually single strand) carry
outgoing signal
18Muscle Tissue Characteristics
- a high degree of cellularity
- cells contain contractile proteins
- well vascularized
- a highly specialized type of connective tissue
19Classification of Muscle Tissues
- two types are Striated
- Skeletal muscle
- attached to bones
- multinucleate
- voluntary
- fibers are parallel and cylindrical
- Cardiac muscle
- most of the heart wall
- single nucleus (usually)
- involuntary
- branched cylinders connected by intercalated discs
20Classification of Muscle Tissues
- One type is non-striated
- Smooth muscle
- located in the walls of hollow organs
- blood vessels
- digestive tract
- airways
- bladder
- involuntary
- single nucleus
- spindle shaped
21Epithelial Membranes
- A particular Epithelium and its underlying
Connective Tissue support
trachea
skin
22Cutaneous Membrane The Skin
23Mucous Membranes
- Line body structures which open directly to the
exterior - Viscous mucus secretions lubricate surfaces and
provide a defensive barrier that traps particles
and microbes
24Serous Membranes
- Line closed body cavities and their organs
- Watery serous fluid lubricates the cavity and its
organs - pleura lungs
- pericardium - heart
- peritoneum - abdominal organs
- parietal
- visceral
25Tissue Injury Repair
- Inflammation
- redness
- swelling
- heat
- pain
- loss of function
- Organization restores blood supply
- Blood clot replaced by granulation tissue
- Regeneration and Fibrosis
- Epithelium regenerates
- Fibrous conn. tissue matures and contracts
26Tissue Repair
- During development some cells lose their ability
to divide with specialization - Some cells maintain the ability to replace others
- Stem cells
- immature, undifferentiated cells
- hide in protected areas in skin/GI tract to
replace cells - Tissue repair
- new cells come from parenchyma (functioning
portion) or stroma (connective tissue) - if parenchyma cells proliferate then repair
nearly complete if not, then we get scar tissue
formation - fibroblasts will produce collagen and other
matrix materials during fibrosis a less
functional tissue
27Conditions Affecting Repair
- Nutrition
- adequate protein in the diet for repair
- necessary vitamins and other nutrients
- Blood circulation
- transport oxygen, nutrients, antibodies and other
defensive molecules and cells to the site - WBCs remove debris which would otherwise
interfere with healing - Age
- young people heal faster and have less obvious
scars - young people have a better nutritional status, a
better blood supply, and a higher metabolism
28Embryonic Germ Layers
Well see the embryonic tissues again in Chapter
28 next semester
29Exam 1 covers Chapters 1-4
30Connective Tissue Structure
31Embryonic Structure