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Tissues Chapter 5 Tissues • A tissue is a group of similar cells that are specialized for a particular function. • Histology – the study of tissues The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks Four Principal Types of Tissues: • Epithelial –covering and lining; glands • Connective – protects and supports, binds organs together, stores energy, and provides immunity • Muscle – movement • Nervous –transmits impulses that coordinate body activities Epithelial Tissue Characteristics • Closely packed cells with little extracellular material between cells • Epithelial cells are arranged in continuous sheets, in single or multiple layers Epithelial Tissue Characteristics • Avascular, meaning no blood vessels. • Attached firmly to nearby connective tissue by means of the basement membrane . • Has a good nerve supply Epithelial Tissue Characteristics • Constant cell division since it is subject to wear and tear. • Epithelial tissue functions include: protection, filtration, secretion, absorption, excretion, transportation **Epithelium is named for its cell shape and number of layers Covering and Lining Epithelium Epithelial layers are arranged as: • Simple epithelium (one layer) • • Stratified epithelium (several layers) Pseudostratified epithelium (one layer that looks like several) nuclei at different level; not all cells reach the surface*** *** cells that do have cilia or secrete mucus. Number of Layers Simple Stratified Pseudostratified Transitional* Cell Shapes • Squamous (flat) for diffusion • Cuboidal (cubelike) - produce secretions and function in absorption • Columnar (rectangular) - protect underlying tissue, may have cilia, secretion or absorption. • Transitional (variable) - change in shape from flat to columnar due to distention, expansion or movement of body parts. Cell Shapes Classification is by number of layers and cell shape (top layer) • Simple squamous epithelium • 1. single layer of flat cells. • 2. found in heart, blood vessels, lungs, and kidneys. • 3. Diffusion, osmosis, and filtration Classification is by number of layers and cell shape (top layer) • Simple cuboidal epithelium • 1. single layer of cube-shaped cells. • 2. found in ovaries, glands, and kidneys • 3. secretion and absorption ***(cuboidal - think glands!) Classification is by number of layers and cell shape (top layer) • Simple columnar epithelium comes in two forms: with or without cilia • Simple columnar epithelium • 1. a single layer • 2. lines the digestive tract from the stomach to the anus Classification is by number of layers and cell shape (top layer) • 3. Functions - secretion, absorption, protection, and movement • 4. Special feature - can have cilia and Goblet cells that secrete mucus Classification is by number of layers and cell shape (top layer) • Pseudostratified columnar epithelium • 1. Has only one layer but looks like it has many layers. (Some cells do not reach the surface.) • 2. Lines passages of respiratory system • 3. Functions - secretion and movement • 4. Pseudostratified ciliated - has cilia and goblet cells Stratified Epithelial Tissue • Has at least two layers of cells. Named by shape of the cells in the superficial layer. • Stratified squamous epithelium – • 1. several layers of cells (Top layer has flattened cells.) • 2. Found in skin, mouth, vagina, and throat • 3. Function - protection • 4. keratin - protein found in outer layer of skin. Waterproofs skin Stratified Epithelial Tissue • Stratified cuboidal epithelium • 1. consists of several layers (Top layer is cube-shaped) • 2. Found in ducts of glands (sweat, mammary, etc) • 3. Function is mainly protection. • 4. Fairly rare Stratified Epithelial Tissue • Stratified columnar epithelium • 1. several layers of cells (Top layer is rectangular.) • 2. Found in male vas deferens & urethra, pharynx • 3. Functions in protection & secretion • 4. Also uncommon Stratified Epithelial Tissue • Transitional epithelium • 1. Has many layers • 2. Found in the urinary bladder & urethra • 3. Function - expansion or stretching (distention) Glandular Epithelium • A gland is a single cell or a mass of epithelial cells adapted for secretion. • There are two types depending on how the cells release the substances they produce: exocrine glands and endocrine glands Glandular Epithelium OUT OUT OF INTO Glandular Epithelium • Exocrine glands secrete product out of ducts or directly onto a free surface. • Secretions include mucus, sweat, oil, ear wax, saliva, and digestive enzymes. Glandular Epithelium Classification of exocrine glands : Holocrine - whole cell disintegrates (example - sebaceous glands) Apocrine glands - a portion of cell pinched off. Cell repairs itself. (example - mammary glands) Merocrine - substance secreted by going through cell membrane (exocytosis). (example - salivary glands) Glandular Epithelium • Endocrine glands - “ductless glands” • discharge their secretions into the bloodstream. • secretions - hormones, which regulate many bodily functions.