Title: Chapter 4: The Tissue Level of Organization
1Chapter 4 The Tissue Level of Organization
2Introduction
- Tissue
- Collection of specialized cells that perform
limited number of functions - Histology
- The study of tissues
- What are the four tissues of the body?
3The four tissues of the Body
- Epithelial Tissue covering
- Covers exposed surfaces
- Lines internal passageways
- Forms glands
- Connective Tissue support
- Fills internal spaces
- Provides structure and strength to support other
tissues - Transports materials
- Stores energy
4The four tissues of the Body
- Muscle Tissue movement
- Specialized for contraction
- Skeletal muscle, heart muscle, and walls of
hollow organs - Neural Tissue control
- Carries electrical signals from 1 part of the
body to another
5Primary Germ Layer
- Embryonic layers give rise to all four tissue
types in adults - Ectoderm nervous, epithelial (epidermis)
- Mesoderm muscle, connective, epithelial
(endothelium mesothelium) - Endoderm epithelial (mucosa)
6KEY CONCEPT
- Tissues are collections of cells and cell
products that perform specific, limited functions - 4 tissue types form all the structures of the
human body - epithelial, connective, muscle, and neural
7Epithelial Tissues
- 2 categories
- Epithelia
- layers of cells covering internal or external
surfaces - Glands
- structures that produce fluid secretions
8Special structures and functions of Epithelial
Tissues.
9Characteristics of Epithelia
- Structures of Epithelia
- Cellularity
- little extracellular matrix, mostly cells
- Contacts
- cells linked by tight junctions
- Polarity
- apical basal surfaces, separate functions
- Attachment
- attached to connective tissue (CT) via basal
lamina - Avascularity
- diffusion of CT
- Regeneration
- high turnover, stem cells at basal surface
10Characteristics of Epithelia
- Functions of Epithelia
- Provide physical protection
- abrasion, dehydration, infection
- Control permeability
- semi-permeability, covers all surfaces
- Provide sensation
- sensory neurons
- Produce specialized secretions (glandular
epithelium) - protection, chemical messengers
11Free Surface and Attached Surface
- 1. Apical Surface exposed to environment, may
have - Microvilli absorption or secretion
- Cilla fluid movement
- 2. Basolateral Surface attachment to
neighboring cells via intercellular connections
Figure 41
12Intercellular Connections
- Support and communication
- General Adhesion Large Connections
- 1. CAMs (cell adhesion molecules)
- Connect adjacent membranes or binds extracellular
materials (e.g. basal lamina) - 2. Intercellular cement
- Thin layer of hyaluronan (proteoglycan)
- Attach adjacent membranes
- Specific AdhesionCell Junctions
- Tight Junctions
- Gap Junctions
- Desmosomes
13Cell Junctions
- Form bonds with other cells or extracellular
material - Tight Junctions
- interlocking proteins, bind lipid portion of
membrane, water tight seal - Gap Junctions
- connexons form channel, allow molecules to pass
for communication - Desmosomes
- CAMs intercellular cement on dense area
attached to cytoskeleton, resist stretching and
twisting
14Tight Junctions
- Between 2 cell membranes
- interlocking proteins, bind lipid portion of
membrane, water tight seal - Prevents passage of water and solutes
Figure 42b
15Gap Junctions
- Connexons form protein channels, allow molecules
to pass for communication - Rapid communication
- Allow ions to pass
- Coordinated contractions in heart muscle
Figure 42c
16Desmosomes
- Cell Adhesion Molecules
- intercellular cement on dense area
- are attached to the cytoskeleton
- - resist stretching and twisting
- Belt Desmosomes
- -continuous band in apical region, attached
to microfilaments - Button Desmosomes
- - spot weld, attached to intermediate
filaments - 3. Hemidesmosomes
- - Half button desmosome at basal
- surface, attaches to basal lamina
Figure 42d
17Basal Lamina (a.k.a. basement membrane)
- Lamina lucida
- Produced by epithelia
- Glycoproteins fine filaments restrict large
molecule movement - Lamina densa
- Produced by connective tissue
- Coarse protein fibers
- Provides strength and filtration
18Repairing and Replacing Epithelia
- Epithelia stem cells are anchored to lamina
lucida - Epithelia are replaced by division of germinative
cells (stem cells) - Stem cells divide and migrate toward apical region
19Classes of Epithelia
- Based on shape and layers
- Shape (all are hexagonal from the top)
- Squamous flat, disc shaped nucleus
- Cuboidal cube or square, center round nucleus
- Columnar tall, basal oval nucleus
Table 41
20Layers
- Simple epithelium
- single layer of cells
- Function
- absorption, secretion, filtration
- Stratified epithelium
- 2 or more layers of cells
- Function
- Protection
- In stratified, name for apical cell shape
21Eight Types of Epithelial Tissues
- Simple squamous epithelium
- Stratified squamous epithelium
- Simple cuboidal epithelium
- Stratified cuboidal epithelium
- Transitional epithelium
- Simple columnar epithelium
- Pseudostratified columnar epithelium
- Stratified columnar epithelium
221. Simple Squamous Epithelium
- Thin, delicate
- Locations found in protected regions
- Mesothelium (serosa), endothelium (blood vessels,
heart), kidney tubules, cornea, and alveoli of
lungs - Functions
- Absorption, diffusion, filtration, or secretion
Figure 43a
232. Stratified Squamous Epithelium
- Basal cells look cuboidal, apical cells squamous
- Found on exposed surfaces
- Functions provide protection from abrasion,
pathogens, and chemicals - Two types
- Nonkeratinized mucosa
- - Kept moist
- - All cells are nucleated
- Location mouth, esophagus, anus, and vagina
- Keratinized epidermis
- - dry, apical cells dead
- - cells contain keratin protein to resist
dehydration and adds strength
Figure 43b
243. Simple Cuboidal Epithelia
- Location Functions
- Kidney tubules - Secretion
- Pancreas -Absorption
- Salivary glands
- Thyroid
254. Stratified Cuboidal Epithelium
- Rare
- Typically 2 layers
- Location Function
- Some sweat glands - Secretion
- Some mammary glands - Absorption
Figure 44b
265. Transitional Epithelium
- Relaxed looks like stratified cuboidal
- Stretched looks squamous
- Location Function
- Urinary bladder - tolerate excessive
stretching - Ureters
Figure 44c
27Columnar Epithelia
- Simple columnar epithelium
- absorption and secretion
- Pseudostratified columnar epithelium
- cilia movement
- Stratified columnar epithelium
- protection
286. Simple Columnar Epithelium
- Nuclei line up near the basal lamina
- Apical surface of cells often has microvilli
brush border (in intestine) - Goblet cells often present secrete mucus
- Locations
- Stomach, intestine, gall bladder, uterine tubes,
and collecting ducts of kidney - Functions
- Absorption or secretion
Figure 45a
297. Pseudostratified Columnar Epithelium
- Several cell types varying shapes and functions
- All cells contact basal lamina
- Some too short to reach apical surface
- Nuclei scattered so it appears stratified
- Tall cells have cilia on apical surface
- Goblet cells (mucus) often present
- Location
Function - Nasal cavity, trachea, bronchi -
move material - Male reproductive tract
across surface - Female uterine tubes
Figure 45b
308. Stratified Columnar Epithelium
- Rare
- Two layers or multiple layers with only apical
layer columnar - Locations (tiny parts of)
- Pharynx, epiglottis, anus, mammary glands,
salivary glands, and urethra - Functions
- Minor protection
Figure 45c
31Glandular Epithelia
- For secretion, makes up glands
- Endocrine glands internally secreting
- -secrete into interstital fluid ? blood
- -secretions hormones
- -regulate and coordinate activities
- e.g. pancreas, thyroid, thymus, pituitary
- Exocrine glands externally secreting
- -secrete into duct ? epithelial surface
- -e.g. digestive enzymes, perspiration,
tears, milk, and mucus - -Classified three ways
- 1. Mode of Secretion
- 2. Type of Secretion
- 3. Structure
32A. Modes of Secretion
- 1. Merocrine secretion
- -product released from secretory vesicles by
exocytosis - -e.g. mucus, sweat
- Apocrine Secretion
- - product accumulates in vesicles
- - apical region of cell which vesicles is
shed to release product - -e.g. milk
Figure 46a
33Modes of Secretion
- 3. Holocrine secretion
- - product accumulates in vesicles
- - whole cell is lysed to release product
- - cell dies, must be replaced by stem cells
- e.g. sebum
Figure 46c
34B. Types of Secretion
- Serous Glands water enzymes
- - e.g. parotid salivary gland
- Mucus Glands mucin
- (water mucus)
- - e.g. goblet cell
- Mixed exocrine glands
- (serous mucus secretion)
- -e.g. submandibular salivary gland
35C. Gland Structure
- Exocrine glands can be classified as
- unicellular glands 1 cell
- E.g. goblet cell which are scattered among
epithelia - Found in intestinal lining
- multicellular glands group of cells named for
shape and structure
36Structure of Multicellular Exocrine Glands
- Structural classes of exocrine glands
Simple Glands undivided
tube shape blind
pockets chamberlike
Figure 47 (1 of 2)
37Structure of Multicellular Exocrine Glands
Compound Glands Divided
tube shaped blind pockets
chamberlike
Figure 47 (2 of 2)
38Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of
epithelial tissue?
A. It is composed entirely of cells. B. It
stores energy reserves. C. It is avascular. D.
It is capable of regeneration.
39An epithelial surface bears many microvilli.
What is the probable function of this epithelium?
A. absorption B. secretion C. transportation D.
sensation
40What is the functional significance of gap
junctions?
A. They maintain water-tight passages. B. They
resist stretching and twisting. C. They
coordinate the function of tissue. D. They
attach cells to extracellular matrix.
41Using a light microscope, you examine a tissue
and see a simple squamous epithelium on the outer
surface. Can this be a sample of the skin
surface?
A. Yes B. No
42Why do the pharynx, esophagus, anus, and vagina
have the same epithelial organization?
A. All are subject to mechanical trauma. B. All
are subject to abrasion. C. All must be able to
expand. D. A and B are correct.
43The secretory cells of sebaceous glands fill with
secretions and then rupture, releasing their
contents. Which type of secretion is this?
A. acinar B. apocrine C. merocrine D. holocrine
44A gland has no ducts to carry the glandular
secretions, and the glands secretions are
released directly into the extracellular fluid.
Which type of gland is this?
A. exocrine gland B. endocrine gland C. acinar
gland D. tubular gland
45Structures and functions of different types of
Connective Tissues.
46Connective Tissues
- Features
- Never exposed to the environment
- Usually vascularized
- Consists of cells in a matrix
- Components
- Specialized cells
- Produce matrix, provide protection
- 2. Extracellular protein fibers
- - Support, strength
- 3. Ground Substance
- - gel fluid, consists of
- interstitial fluid, cell adhesion molecules,
and - GAGs (glycosaminoglycans)
- - proteoglycans that form a gel
- Fibers Ground Substance Matrix
47The Matrix
- The extracellular components of connective
tissues (fibers and ground substance) - majority of cell volume
- determines specialized function
48Functions of Connective Tissue
- Establish structural framework
- Transport fluid and dissolved materials
- Protect organs
- Support, surround, interconnect tissues
- Store energy reserves
- Insulate body
- Defend against pathogens
49Classification of Connective Tissues
- Connective tissue proper
- Many cell types and fiber types in thick ground
substance - Loose open fiber framework
- Dense tightly packed fibers
- Fluid connective tissues
- May cell types in watery matrix with soluble
fibers - Supportive connective tissues
- Limited cell population in tightly packed matrix
50Connective Tissues Derived from Mesenchyme
Embryonic CT - mesenchymal cells in
gelatinous matrix with fine fibers
511. Connective Tissue Proper
- Viscous ground substance
- Varied extracellular fibers
- Varied cell population
- Ground substance rich in GAG
- -viscous, prevents microbe
- penetration
- Fiber types
- 1. Collagen fibers collagen protein
- 2. Reticular fibers collagen protein
- Elastic fibers elastin protein
Figure 48
521. Connective Tissue Proper
- Fiber types
- 1. Collagen fibers collagen protein
- -rope like, long, straight
- -resists force
- -most common
- 2. Reticular fibers collagen protein
- -branchy, forms framework
- -framework of an organ stroma
- (functional cells of an organ
parenchyma) - Elastic fibers elastin protein
- -wavy, flexible
- - Designed to stretch
538 Cell Types of Connective Tissue Proper
- Mast cells
- Lymphocytes
- Microphages
- Fibroblasts
- Macrophages
- Adipocytes
- Mesenchymal cells
54Cell Types of CT Proper
- Fibroblasts
- - most common, most abundent
- - secretes ground substance
- hyaluronan protein GAGs
- - secrete fiber proteins (collagen,
elastin) - - some specialized types chondrocytes
(cartilage) -
osteocytes (bone) - Mesenchymal Cells
- - stem cells
- - differentiate to replace CT cells after
- Injury (e.g. fibroblasts,
adipocytes) - Adipocytes (fat cells)
- - store triglycerides
- - organelles pushed to periphery
- -number, size and location of cells varies
- Macrophages
- - phagocytic for defense
- - (eat pathogens and damaged
cells) - - some fixed in tissues
55Cell Types of CT Proper
- Microphages
- - neutrophils and eosinophils
- - phagocytic
- - migrate from
- blood to site of injury
- Lymphocytes B and T cells
- - involved in immune response
- - make antibodies
- - attack foreign cells
- - increased number during infection
- - constantly migrate between
- - blood and tissues and lymph
- Mast cells
- - contain histamine and heparin
- - stimulate inflammation in response to injury
56Categories of Connective Tissue Proper
- Loose connective tissue
- more ground substance, less fibers
- e.g., fat (adipose tissue)
- Dense connective tissue
- more fibers, less ground substance
- e.g., tendons
57A. Loose Connective Tissue
- Highly vascularized
- Varied cell types
- Functions
- Fill space
- Cushion support tissues
- Store fat
- Feed epithelial layers
- Three types
- Areolar CT
- Adipose Tissue
- Reticular Tissue
58Loose Connective TissueAreolar CT
- 1. Areolar CT
- Most common
- Least specialized
- Open framework
- Matrix mostly ground substance
- All fiber types
- Location deep to epithelium
- Functions
- Reservoir for water and salts
- Absorbs shock and distortion
- Fills space
- Feeds epithelium
59A. Loose Connective TissueAdipose Tissue
- 2. Adipose Tissue
- -90 adipocytes
- - Locations
- - deep to skin, surrounding eyeballs,
kidneys, heart - - Functions
- - padding, insulation, and energy storage
- -Two types
- - White fat adults, triglyceride
storage, insulation - - Brown fat infants, high mitochondria
content for heat - generation
60A. Loose Connective TissueAdipose Tissue
- Reticular Tissue
- -stroma (supportive fibers) of organs
- -consists of reticular fibers
- Locations some organ
- e.g. lymph nodes, bone marrow,
liver - Function support parenchyma (functional)
cells
61B. Dense Connective Tissue
- Poorly vascularized
- Mostly fibers, little ground substance
- Only fibroblasts
- Three types
- Dense Regular CT
- Dense Irregular CT
- Elastic CT
62B. Dense Connective TissueDense Regular CT
- Dense Regular CT
- -bundles of parallel collagen fiber, aligned
with direction of force - -Location
- - tendons (muscle to bone)
- - ligaments (bone to bone)
- - muscle coverings and fascia
- -Function
- - high strength attachment
- - stabilize positions
-
-
63B. Dense Connective TissueDense Irregular CT
- 2. Dense Irregular CT
- - mesh of collagen fibers
- - Location
- -capsules of organs
- -perioteum (sheath around bone)
- -perichondrium (around cartilage
- -dermis (deep skin)
- -Function
- -resist tension from
- many directions
- -attachment
- Strength in Many Directions
64B. Dense Connective TissueElastic CT
- Elastic CT
- -mostly elastic fibers, some collagen
- -Location
- -vertebral ligaments and artery walls
- -Function Strength with stretch and flex
-
Figure 411c
65Fluid Tissue Transport Systems
- Cardiovascular system (blood)
- arteries
- capillaries
- veins
- Lymphatic system (lymph)
- lymphatic vessels
66Fluid Connective Tissues
- Fluid connective tissues
- A. Blood
- - Matrix plasma serum (fluid)
- plasma proteins (produced
by liver) fibers - are soluble until clot
forms - - Cells Formed elements
- originate from hemocytoblast (stem
cells) in - bone marrow
- -Location contained in blood vessels
- -Function
- -transport nutrients, wastes and defense cells
- throughout the body
- Plasma ? Interstitial Fluid ? Lymph ?
Plasma
67Formed Elements of Blood
- Erythrocytes (RBCs) carry oxygen
- Leukocytes (WBCs) defense
- Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Basophils, Lymphocytes
(B and T cells), Monocytes (Macrophages) - Platelets carry clotting factors
Figure 412
68Fluid Connective Tissues
- B. Lymph
- -Matrix lymph (recollected plasma fluid)
- -Cells lymphocytes (immune defense)
- -Location
- -contained in lymphatic vessels
- -Function
- -purify and return fluid to blood
69Lack of vitamin C in the diet interferes with the
ability of fibroblasts to produce collagen. What
effect might this interference have on connective
tissue?
A. Tissue is unable to phagocytose. B. Tissue is
unable to produce melanin. C. Tissue is weak and
prone to damage. D. Tissue is unable to produce
heparine.
70Many allergy sufferers take antihistamines to
relieve their allergy symptoms. Which type of
cell produces the molecule that this medication
blocks?
A. eosinophils B. mast cells C. basophils D. B
and C
71Which type of connective tissue contains
primarily triglycerides?
A. areolar B. adipose C. reticular D.
mesenchyme
72Supportive Connective Tissues
- Strong framework, few cells, fibrous matrix
- Function support and shape
- Mature cells in lacunae
- Two types
- 1. Cartilage
- gel-type ground substance
- for shock absorption and protection
- 2. Bone
- calcified (made rigid by calcium salts, minerals)
- for weight support
731. Cartilage
- Composition
- Matrix 80 water, firm gel of glycoaminoglycans
made of chondroitin sulfate and hyaluronic acid,
fibers - Cells chondrocytes in lacunae (chambers)
- Cells formed the matrix
- Structure
- No innervation
- Avascular (no blood vessels)
- chondrocytes produce antiangiogenesis factor
- Surrounded by Perichondrium
- Outer layer dense irregular CT
- Function protection, attachment
- Inner layer cellular (fibroblasts)
- Function growth and repair
74Growth of Cartilage Not common in adults
- Interstitial Growth (embryos)
- Chondroblasts in matrix divide
- Daughters produce more matrix
- Mature cells chondrocytes
Figure 413a
75Cartilage Growth
- 2. Appositional Growth (children, minor repair
in adult) - New layers added by cells of inner perichondrium
- Serious Injury scar cartilage replaced by
fibrous collagen
Figure 413b
76Types of Cartilage
- 1. Hyaline cartilage
- 2. Elastic cartilage
- 3. Fibrocartilage
77Types of Cartilage
- 1. Hyaline cartilage
- translucent matrix
- Contains fine, closely packed collagen fibers
- Tough, springy
- Location
- Ribs, nose, respiratory tract, articular surfaces
- no perichondrium
- Function
- Provide stiff flexible support
- Reduce friction between bones
78Types of Cartilage
- 2. Elastic cartilage
- Matrix contains tightly packed elastic fibers
- Flexible support
- Location
- Auricle (external) of ear, epiglottis
- Function
- Resilient, flexible, shape holding support
79Types of Cartilage
- Fibrocartilage
- - Matrix contains dense interwoven collagen
fibers with little ground substance - tough, durable
- Location Function
- Knee (meniscus) - Resist Compression
- Pubic symphasis - Absorb Shock Pads knee
joints - Intervertebral discs - Prevents
bone-to-bone contact
Figure 414c
802. Bone/Osseous Tissue
- Highly vascularized
- Little ground substance
- Matrix
- 2/3 calcified calcium salts deposits for
strength - Calcium phosphate calcium carbonate
- 1/3 collagen for flexibility to resist shatter
- Cells Osteocytes
- Cells formed the matrix
- Located in lacunae arranged around central canals
within matrix - Connected by cytoplasmic extensions that extend
through canaliculi - Canaliculi excess blood supply
- Canaliculi necessary for nutrient and waste
exchange, no diffusion through calcium
81Bone/Osseous Tissue
- Surrounded by Periosteum covers bone surfaces
- Outer fibrous layer for attachment
- Inner cellular layer for growth and repair
- Location Bones
- Function
- Support Protection
- Levers for movement
- Storage of minerals
82Structures of Bone
- Osteocytes
- Connected by cytoplasmic extensions that extend
through canaliculi (small channels through
matrix) - Canaliculi necessary for nutrient and waste
exchange
Figure 415
83Comparing Cartilage and Bone
Table 42
84Why does cartilage heal so slowly?
- It lacks a direct blood supply, necessary for
proper healing. - Chondroitin sulfate prevents healing.
- Matrix inhibits cellular regeneration.
- Interstitial fluid, necessary for proper healing,
is excluded.
85If a person has a herniated intervertebral disc,
which type of cartilage has been damaged?
A. elastic cartilage B. fibrocartilage C.
hyaline cartilage D. areolar cartilage
86Which two types of connective tissue have a fluid
matrix?
A. lymph and cartilage B. cartilage and bone C.
blood and bone D. blood and lymph
87Connective tissues form the framework of the
body.
88Special Connective Tissue Structures
- 1. Fascia
- Connective tissues that provides a framework to
connect organs to the body - Function
- provide strength and stability
- maintain positions of internal organs
- provides routes for blood vessels, lymphatic
vessels, and nerves
891. Fascia
- Bodys framework of connective tissue
- Layers and wrappings that support or surround
organs
Provides insulation and padding
Resists force and anchors position
Prevents distortion by muscles
90- Epithelial and
- connective tissues combine to
- form 4 types of membranes.
912. Membranes
- Membranes
- are physical barriers
- that line or cover portions of the body
- Consist of
- an epithelium
- supported by connective tissues
924 Types of Membranes
- Mucous
- Serous
- Cutaneous
- Synovial
Figure 416
931. Mucous Membrane
- 1. Mucous membranes (mucosae)
- Epithelium areolar connective tissue called
lamina propria - Line passageways that connect to external
environment - Epithelium kept moist with mucus secretions
- Location
- digestive, respiratory, urinary, and reproductive
tracts
942. Serous Membranes
- 2. Serous Membranes/Serosa
- - mesothelium areolar connective tissue
- - lines body cavities to reduce friction
- - pleura, peritoneum, pericardium
- - Double Membrane
- - Parietal layer lines cavity
- - Visceral layer around organ
- - Epithelium kept moist by serous fluid
(transudate)
Figure 416b
95Cavities and Serous Membranes
- Pleural membrane
- lines pleural cavities
- covers lungs
- Peritoneum
- lines peritoneal cavity
- covers abdominal organs
- Pericardium
- lines pericardial cavity
- covers heart
963. Cutaneous Membrane
- 3. Cutaneous membrane
- Epidermis dermis skin
- Keratinized stratified squamous epithelium
areolar and dense irregular connective tissue
only dry membrane - Thick and waterproof
Figure 416c
974. Synovial Membranes
- Areolar connective tissue with woven collagen,
proteogycans and glycoproteins in matrix - Lines joint capsules
- Produce synovial fluid (lubricant)
- Reduces friction of articular (hyaline cartilage)
- Protect the ends of bones
- Lack a true epithelium
- Only membrane with no epithelium
98Structure of Synovial Membranes
Figure 416d
99Which cavities in the body are lined by serous
membranes?
A. cranial and abdomenal B. pleural, peritoneal,
and pericardial C. synovial and fascial D.
nasal, urinary and reproductive
100The lining of the nasal cavity is normally moist,
contains numerous goblet cells, and rests on a
layer of connective tissue called the lamina
propria. Which type of membrane is this?
A. mucous B. serous C. cutaneous D. synovial
101A sheet of tissue has many layers of collagen
fibers than run in different directions in
successive layers. Which type of tissue is this?
A. fascia B. cutaneous C. parietal D. synovial
102Muscle Tissue
- Function Provide Movement
- Is specialized for contraction
- Features
- Highly vascularized
- Contains actin and myosin for contraction
103Structures and functions of the three types of
muscle tissue.
104Three Muscle Types
- Skeletal Muscle
- Cardiac Muscle
- Smooth Muscle
105Classification of Muscle Cells
- Striated (muscle cells with a banded appearance)
- or nonstriated (not banded)
- Muscle cells can have a single nucleus
- or be multinucleate
- Muscle cells can be controlled voluntarily
(consciously) - or involuntarily (automatically)
1063 Types of Muscle Tissue
- 1. Skeletal muscle Striated, voluntary, and
multinucleated - Cells fibers
- Up to 1 ft long
- Multinuclear
- No cell division
- Appear striated actin and myosin organized into
myofibrils - Some satellite cells (stem cells) present for
minor repair after injury - Location skeletal muscles (meat)
- Function
- Move skeleton
- Guard entrances/exit
- Generate heat
1073 Types of Muscle Tissue
- 2. Cardiac Muscle cells
- - Striated Involuntary, usually single nucleus
- Cells cardiocytes
- Long, branched
- Usually single nucleus but up to 5
- No cell division
- Striated
- Neighboring cells connected by intercalated disc
- Desmosomes intercellular cement gap
junctions Desmosomes cement - - provide tight linkage of neighboring cells
- Gap junctions
- - allow exchange of ions to coordinate
- contraction
108Cardiac Muscle Tissue
- Striated, involuntary, and single nucleus
- Location majority of heart
- Function move blood through body
Figure 418b
1093 Types of Muscle Tissue
- 3. Smooth Muscle Tissue
- - Nonstriated, involuntary, and single nucleus
- - Cells, small, spindle shaped
- - uninuclear
- - capable of cell division
- - no striations no myofibril organization
- - Locations
- - walls of blood vessels
- - walls of hollow organs
- - digestive,respiratory,urinary,reproduct
ive tracts - - Function move materials through the organ
Figure 418c
110Basic structure and role of neural tissue.
111Nervous/Neural Tissue
- Function
- specialized for conducting electrical (nervous)
impulses - rapidly senses internal or external environment
- process information and controls responses
- Location
- Most in brain and spinal cord Central Nervous
System - 2 in Peripheral Nervous System
- Cells
- Neuroglia Cells
- Support, repair, and supply nutrients to nervous
tissue - Neurons
- Transmit information
- Up to 3 ft long
- Large soma (cell body)
- Large nucleus, visible nucleoli
- Many dendrites receive info
- One axon transmits info
- No Cell division
112Cell Parts of a Neuron
- Cell body
- contains the nucleus and nucleolus
- Dendrites
- short branches extending from the cell body
- receive incoming signals
- Axon (nerve fiber)
- long, thin extension of the cell body
- carries outgoing electrical signals to their
destination
113Injuries affect on tissues of the body.
114Tissue Injuries and Repair
- Tissues respond to injuries to maintain
homeostasis - Cells restore homeostasis with 2 processes
- inflammation
- Regeneration (repair)
- Inflammation
- Prevent spread of injury or infection
- Characterized by swelling, redness, warmth and
pain - Process to remove necrotic cells and infectious
agents
115The Process of Inflammation
Damaged Cells Release prostaglandins
Undergo necrosis Trigger inflammation
Endothelial Cells Vessels leak and plasma
enters wounds delivering leukocytes and
clotting proteins
Fibroblasts migrate to the wound and are
stimulated to secrete collagen - form a fiber
scar to reinforce the clot and begin
repair Damaged tissue is Repaired or Replaced
116Repair or Replacement
- Damaged tissue is repaired or replaced depending
on the injury and type of tissue - Regeneration
- replacement of collagen with original tissue type
- repair will not be visible
- Fibrosis
- Visible scar of collagen
- Tissue is completely replaced by a dense collagen
patch - Tissue type function is lost at the site of the
scar
117Summary Inflammation and Regeneration
Figure 420
118Aging and Tissue Structure
- Speed and efficiency of tissue repair decreases
with age, due to - slower rate of energy consumption (metabolism)
- hormonal alterations
- reduced physical activity
119Effects of Aging
- Chemical and structural tissue changes
- thinning epithelia and connective tissues
- increased bruising and bone brittleness
- joint pain and broken bones
- cardiovascular disease
- mental deterioration
120Aging and Cancer
- Cancer rates increase with age
- 1 in 4 people in the U.S. develop cancer
- cancer is the 2 cause of death in the U.S.
- environmental chemicals and cigarette smoke can
cause cancer
121Injury and Cancer
- Repeat or chronic
- Inflammation causes damage
- Dysplasia change in normal shape, size,
organization of tissue cells (reversible) - Metaplasia more serious changes, abnormal
division of stem cells (reversible) - Anaplasia breakdown of tissue organization,
genetic abnormalities of stem cells
(irreversible) - Cancer uncontrolled growth
122Which type of muscle tissue has small, tapering
cells with single nuclei and no obvious
striations?
A. skeletal B. cardiac C. smooth D. all of the
above
123A tissue contains irregularly shaped cells with
many fibrous projections, some several
centimeters long. These are probably which type
of cell?
A. neuroglia B. neurons C. myocytes D.
adipocytes
124If skeletal muscle cells in adults are incapable
of dividing, how is new skeletal muscle formed?
- through the enlarging and splitting of existing
cells - through the atrophy of existing cells
- through the addition of new striations
- through the division and fusion of satellite cells
125If skeletal muscle cells in adults are incapable
of dividing, how is new skeletal muscle formed?
- through the enlarging and splitting of existing
cells - through the atrophy of existing cells
- through the addition of new striations
- through the division and fusion of satellite cells
126SUMMARY
- Organization of specialized cells into tissues
- epithelial tissue
- connective tissue
- muscular tissue
- nervous tissue
- Division of epithelial tissues into epithelia and
glands - epithelia as avascular barriers for protection
- glands as secretory structures
- Specializations of epithelial cells for sensation
or motion - microvilli
- cilia
127SUMMARY
- Attachments of epithelia to other cells and
underlying tissues - polarity (apical surface and basal lamina)
- cell adhesion molecules (CAMs)
- cell junctions (tight junctions, gap junctions
and desmosomes) - Maintenance of epithelia
- germinative cells stem cells
- Classification of epithelial cells
- by number of cell layers (simple or stratified)
- by shape of cells (squamous, columnar or
cuboidal)
128SUMMARY
- Classification of epithelial glands
- by method of secretion (exocrine or endocrine)
- by type of secretions (merocrine, apocrine,
holocrine) - by organization (unicellular or multicellular)
- by structure (related to branches and ducts)
- The functions of connective tissues
- Structure, transport, protection, support,
connections, and energy storage - The structure of connective tissues
- Matrix, ground substance, and protein fibers
129SUMMARY
- The classification of connective tissues
- connective tissue proper (cell types, fiber
types, and embryonic connective tissues) - fluid connective tissues (blood and lymph, fluid
transport systems) - supporting connective tissues (cartilage and
bone) - The 4 types of membranes that cover and protect
organs - mucous membranes (lamina propria)
- serous membranes (transudate)
- cutaneous membrane (skin)
- synovial membrane (encapsulating joints)
130SUMMARY
- The fasciae (superficial, deep and subserous)
- The 3 types of muscle tissues (skeletal, cardiac,
and smooth) - The classification of muscle tissues by
striation, nucleation, and voluntary control - The 2 types of cells in neural tissue
- neurons and neuroglia
- The parts of a neuron (nerve cell)
- cell body, dendrites, and axon (nerve fiber)
- Tissue injuries and repair systems (inflammation
and regeneration) - The relationship between aging, tissue structure,
and cancer