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Overview of the Cellular Basis of Life

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Title: Overview of the Cellular Basis of Life


1
Chapter 3 Cells and Tissues
  • Overview of the Cellular Basis of Life
  • building blocks of all living things
  • human body has 50 to 60 trillion of these tiny
    building blocks.
  • carry out all chemical activities needed to
    sustain life.
  • made of four primary elements- carbon, hydrogen,
    oxygen and nitrogen
  • 60-80 of our cells are made of water (one reason
    it is essential for life)
  • constantly bathed in a dilute saltwater solution
    called interstitial fluid where all exchanges
    between cells and blood are made

2
II. Anatomy of a Cell
  • Anatomy of a Cell
  • Cells are organized into three main regions
  • 1. Nucleus that contains DNA
  • 2. Cytoplasm
  • 3. Plasma Membrane (cell membrane)
  • a. barrier for cells contents
  • b. double phospholipids bilayer
  • c. Selectively permeable- regulates what enters
    and leaves the cell

3
d. Plasma membrane junctions the meeting of two
adjacent cell membranes. There are three types
  1. Tight junctions- fit together like a zipper
    forming an impermeable junction. These exist in
    cells lining the digestive tract to keep
    digestive enzymes and microorganisms from seeping
    into the bloodstream.
  2. Desmosomes- anchoring junctions that prevent cell
    separation. These are abundant in tissues that
    are subjected to great mechnical stress, such as
    skin cells.
  3. Gap junctions- the cells are connected by hollow
    cylinders (connexons) which allows chemical
    substances to pass between cells. These are
    abundant in heart muscle tissue where the
    movement of ions from cell to cell to synchronize
    the heart rhythm.

4
Cell Diversity
  • All cells share the same general structures a
    cell membrane, a nucleus and cytoplasm. However,
    their function in the body is different. See
    examples below

Secretory vs. Absorptive Epithelial Picture
5
Eukaryotic Cell
6
  • 4 Tissue types found in the body

7
III. Body Tissues
  • Tissues are groups of cells with similar
    structure and function.
  • Four primary tissues types
  • 1. Epithelium (covering)
  • 2. Connective (support)
  • 3. Nervous Tissue (control)
  • 4. Muscle (movement)

8
IV. Epithelium
  • Found in different areas of the body, such as
    body coverings, body linings, and glandular
    tissue.
  • Functions are for protection (skin), absorption
    (small intestine), filtration (kidneys), and
    secretion (glands).
  • Characteristics of epithelial tissue include
  • 1. Cells fit closely together
  • 2. Tissue layer always has one free surface (the
    apical surface) that is exposed to the cavity of
    an internal organ or the bodys exterior.
  • 3. The lower surface is bound by a basement
    membrane.
  • 4. Avascular (these tissues have no blood supply
    of their own)
  • 5. Regenerate well if nourished.
  •  
  • .

9
Classification of epithelium- not in your notes
but may want to write
  • Number of cell layers
  • simple- one layer
  • stratified- more than one layer
  • Shape of cells
  • squamous- flattened
  • cuboidal- cube shape
  • columnar- column- like

10
  • SIMPLE SQUAMOUS - single layer (simple) of very
    thin, flattened cells (squamous).
  • Function diffusion and filtration. Found in air
    sacs of lungs, walls of capillaries.

11
  • SIMPLE CUBOIDAL - single layer, cube-shaped
    cells. Function Secretion and absorption. Found
    Lining of kidney tubules, ducts of glands,
    covering surface of ovaries

12
  • SIMPLE COLUMNAR - single layer, elongated cells
    with their nuclei in about the same position in
    each cell (usually near the basement membrane).
    Protection, secretion, absorption. Found in the
    lining of digestive tract and uterus- contains
    scatter goblet cells functioning in the secretion
    of mucus- some columnar cells (involved in
    absorption) have tiny finger-like processes from
    their free surface called microvilli (increases
    surface area)

13
  • STRATIFIED SQUAMOUS - muli-layered, squamous
    cells. Thicker tissue.Functions in protection.
    Found lining body cavities like the mouth and
    outer layer of skin

14
  • PSEUDOSTRATIFIED COLUMNAR - appear "stratified"
    but really a single layer with nuclei at various
    levels giving the appearance of layered cells.
    Usually ciliated (tiny, hair-like projections for
    sweeping materials along a surface). Contains
    goblet cells.- Function secretion and
    cilia-aided movement- Location lining air
    passages like the trachea and tubes of the
    reproductive system

15
  • TRANSITIONAL EPITHELIUM - thick, layered cuboidal
    cells. "Stretchable" tissue, also forms barrier
    to block diffusion. Found lining of urinary
    bladder.

16
Types of Epithelium
Thin for gas exchange between alveoli and
capillaries
Can secrete mucus and have cilia to help clean air
Some cells Shorter and nuclei Appear at
different Heights above membrane
Contain lots of golgi and ER to manufacture and
secrete or absorb
Many layers of cells to replace those lost when
swallowing
Common in glands
Adapted for secretion (goblet cells) of mucus
and ciliated to propel food
Stretches as bladder fills with urine
Cells at basal layer Are cuboidal or columnar
and vary at the free surface
17
Connective Tissue
  • A Found everywhere in the body, the most abundant
    and widely distributed tissue.
  • Functions include binding tissues together,
    support, and protection
  • Characteristics of connective tissue
  • 1. Variations in blood supply- some tissue types
    are well vascularized (have good blood supply),
    while some have a poor blood supply (tendons and
    ligaments). Cartilage is avascular.

18
Connective Tissue
  • 2. Extracellular matrix- the nonliving material
    that surrounds the tissue. (This is what makes
    connective tissue so different from other
    tissues.)
  • Matrix is composed of a ground substance (water,
    protein, and other molecules) and fibers
    (collagen, elastic, reticular).
  • The matrix allows connective tissue to act as a
    soft packing tissue around organs (adipose
    tissue), to bear weight, or withstand stretching
    and abrasion (bones, tendons and ligaments).
  • Mast cells (prevents clots)
  • ? Macrophages (consumers)
  • ? Fibroblasts (produce fibers)

19
Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Bone (osseous) - composed of bone cells, hard
    matrix of calcium salts, large numbers of
    collagen fibers.
  • used to protect and support the body

20
Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Hyaline Cartilage- most common type of cartilage,
    composed of collagen and matrix
  • Entire fetal skeleton is hyaline cartilage, but
    by the time of birth, most cartilage is replaced
    by bone.

21
V. Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue
types
  • Elastic cartilage- provides elasticity
  • Example- supports the external ear
  • Fibrocartilage- highly compressible
  • Example- forms cushion-like discs between
    vertebrae

 
22
V. Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Dense connective tissue- main matrix element is
    collagen fibers which form strong rope-like
    structures, (the collagen producing cells are
    called fibroblasts)
  • Example- tendons (attach muscle to bone),
    ligaments (attach bone to bone)

23
V. Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Areolar connective tissue- most widely
    distributed connective tissue that serves as a
    kind of universal packing material between other
    tissues
  • contains all fiber types,
  • can soak up excess fluid (this is the tissue that
    swells causing edema)
  • universal packing tissue and glue that holds
    internal organs together

24
V. Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Adipose tissue- commonly called fat

25
V. Connective Tissue D. Connective tissue types
  • Blood- blood cells surrounded by a fluid matrix
  • fibers are visible during clotting
  • functions as the transport vehicle for materials

26
IV. Muscle Tissue
  • Functions to produce movement
  • Three types are
  • Skeletal muscle- voluntary, striated
  • Smooth muscle involuntary, surrounds organs
  • Cardiac muscle- involuntary, only in heart,
    striated
  • Intercalated disks are the junctions that allow
    heart cells to rapidly conduct electrical
    impulses through the heart.

27
VII. Nervous Tissue
  • Composed of neurons and nerve support cells
  • Functions to send and receive impulses to other
    areas of body
  • Located in nervous system structures such as the
    brain, spinal cord and nerves.

28
How can we tell the difference between
connective, muscle, epithelial and nervous tissue?
29
What are mast cells?
  • Mast cell A connective tissue cell whose normal
    function is unknown but which is frequently
    injured in allergic reactions, releasing
    chemicals including histamine that are very
    irritating and cause itching, swelling, and fluid
    leakage from cells. These allergic chemicals may
    also cause muscle spasm and lead to lung and
    throat tightening, as in asthma. Also known as a
    mastocyte or labrocyte.

30
Wound healing videos
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFraKUUetOpc

31
3 Phases of Wound Healing
  • Inflammatory-
  • Redness, swelling, pain are symptoms
  • Increase in capillary permeability
  • Clotting occurs (platelets)
  • Phagocytes (type of WBC) moves in
  • Growth factors attract fibroblasts (cells that
    make matrix and collagen)

32
Proliferative Phase
  • Granulation tissue forms, this involved
    fibroblast cells actively secreting collagen
  • Angiogensis- new blood vessels form
  • Endothelial cells from granulation tissue- which
    is the foundation of scar tissue development
  • Epithelialization- new epithelial cells
  • White blood cells leave, swelling goes down

33
Remodeling Phase
  • Final scar tissue formed
  • Scar becomes avascular

34
VIII. Tissue Repair (Wound Healing) A. Two
types of tissue repair 1. Tissue regeneration
is the replacement of destroyed tissue by the
same kind of cells 2. Fibrosis occurs when
repair by dense fibrous connective tissue
called scar tissue forms. Fibrosis occurs in
cardiac and nervous tissues of the body. B.
The type of tissue repair depends on the type of
tissue damage and the severity of the injury.
35
C. Steps in Tissue repair 1. Capillaries become
very permeable. 2. Clotting proteins, platelets,
macrophages, and other substances seep into the
injured area. 3. A clot is constructed to wall
off the injured area (when the clot dries and
hardens this forms the scab). 4. Formation of
granulation tissue (delicate tissue that is
made of new capillaries that grow into the
damaged area). Replaces the clot! a. this
tissue also contains fibroblasts that synthesize
collagen fibers that bridge the gap 5. Surface
epithelium regenerates this covers an
underlying layer of fibrosis (the scar).
36
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37
  • D. The regeneration of tissue
  • 1. Tissues that regenerate easily epithelial,
    fibrous connective, and bone
  • 2. Tissues that regenerate poorly skeletal
    muscle
  • 3. Tissues that are replaced largely with scar
    tissue cardiac and nervous tissue within the
    brain and spinal cord. Scar tissue lacks the
    normal flexibility of tissues which hinders the
    functioning.
  • As we age there is a decrease in mass and
    viability of most tissues. The epithelia thin,
    the amount of collagen in the body declines which
    makes tissue repair less efficient, and nervous
    tissues begins to atrophy.

CNS neurons cannot regenerate, but PNS neurons
can!
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