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Epithelial tissue Histology = The study of tissues Tissue = A collection of cells that perform related functions, and are similar in structure Tissues are aggregates or groups of cells organized to perform one or more specific functions. The Four Primary Tissue Types: 1. Epithelial 2. Connective 3. Muscular 4. Nervous Epithelium (epithelial tissue) covers body surfaces, lines body cavities, and forms glands. Connective tissue underlies or supports the other three basic tissues, both structurally and functionally. Muscle tissue is made up of contractile cells and is responsible for movement. Nerve tissue receives, transmits, and integrates information from outside and inside the body to control the activities of the body. Epithelium covers body surfaces, lines body cavities, and constitutes glands The cells that make up epithelium have three principal characteristics: 1. 2. 3. They are closely apposed and adhere to one another by means of specific cell-tocell adhesion molecules that form specialized cell junctions They exhibit functional and morphologic polarity. Their basal surface is attached to an underlying basement membrane, a noncellular, protein–polysaccharide-rich layer. Classification of epithelium simple when it is one cell layer thick stratified when it has two or more cell layers The individual cells that compose an epithelium are described as: squamous when the width of the cell is greater than its height; cuboidal when the width, depth, and height are approximately the same; columnar when the height of the cell appreciably exceeds the width Two special categories of epithelium are pseudostratified and transitional. Pseudostratified epithelium appears stratified, although some of the cells do not reach the free surface; all rest on the basement membrane. •Transitional epithelium (urothelium) is a term applied to the epithelium lining the lower urinary tract, extending from the minor calyces of the kidney down to the proximal part of the urethra. Transitional Epithelium Transitional Epithelium with rounded binucleated surface cells Specific names are given to epithelium in certain locations: Endothelium is the epithelial lining of the blood and lymphatic vessels. Mesothelium is the epithelium that lines the walls and covers the contents of the closed cavities of the body (i.e.,the abdominal, pericardial, and pleural cavities). Diverse epithelial functions can be found in different organs of the body. A given epithelium may serve one or more functions, depending on the activity of the cell types that are present: • secretion, as in the columnar epithelium of the stomach and the gastric glands; • absorption, as in the columnar epithelium of the intestines and proximal convoluted tubules in the kidney; • transportation, as in the transport of materials or cells along the surface of an epithelium by motile cilia or in the transport of materials across an epithelium to and from the connective tissue; • protection, as in the stratified squamous epithelium of the skin (epidermis) and the transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder; • receptor function to receive and transduce external stimuli, as in the taste buds of the tongue, olfactory epithelium of the nasal mucosa, and the retina of the eye. Epithelial cells exhibit distinct polarity. They have an apical domain, a lateral domain, and a basal domain. The apical domain and its modifications • microvilli, cytoplasmic processes containing a core of actin filaments; • stereocilia (stereovilli), microvilli of unusual length; • cilia, cytoplasmic processes containing bundle of microtubules. Summary of the maintenance of cell shape by junctions and cytoskeletal elements Microvilli are fingerlike cytoplasmic projections on the apical surface of most epithelial cells. The internal structure of microvilli contains a core of actin filaments that are cross-linked by several actin bundling proteins. Stereocilia are unusually long, immotile microvilli. Cilia are capable of moving fluid and particles along epithelial surfaces Cilia contain an axoneme, which represents an organized core of microtubules arranged in a 9 + 2 pattern. Cilia movement originates from the sliding of microtubule doublets, which is generated by the ATPase activity of the dynein arms. The lateral domain and its modifications Occluding junctions are impermeable and allow epithelial cells to function as a barrier. Also called tight Junctions. Anchoring junctions Communicating junctions Occluding Junctions The zonula occludens (pl., zonulae occludentes) represents the most apical component in the junctional complex between epithelial cells. occluding junctions form the primary intercellular diffusion barrier between adjacent cells The zonula occludens is created by localized sealing of the plasma membrane of adjacent cells. Several proteins are involved in the formation of zonula occludens strands Junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) Occludin zonula occludens proteins ZO-1, ZO-2, and ZO-3 Claudins Anchoring junctions provide lateral adhesions between epithelial cells zonula adherens ( pl., zonulae adherentes), which interacts with the network of actin filaments inside the cell; and macula adherens (pl., maculae adherentes) or desmosome, which interacts with intermediate filaments The zonula adherens The zonula adherens is composed of the transmembrane cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin. On the cytoplasmic side, the tail of E-cadherin is bound to catenin . The resulting E-cadherin–catenin complex binds to vinculin and actinin and is required for the interaction of cadherins with the actin filaments of the cytoskeleton. The macula adherens (desmosome) provides a localized spotlike junction between epithelial cells. In the area of the macula adherens, desmogleins and desmocollins provide the linkage between the plasma membranes of adjacent cells. Desmosome Structure Communicating junctions, also called gap junctions or nexuses Gap junctions are formed by 12 subunits of the connexin protein family. Conformational changes in connexins leading to opening or closing gap junction channels Gap Junction 2 nM gap between membranes Open pores for ions, molecules, etc Connexin molecules The basal domain The basement membrane is a specialized structure located next to the basal domain of epithelial cells and the underlying connective tissue stroma. The basal lamina contains molecules that come together to form a sheet like structure. composed of laminins, a type IV collagen molecule, fibronectin Cell-to-extracellular matrix junctions anchor the cell to the extracellular matrix; they are represented by focal adhesions and hemidesmosomes. Junctional Complexes Epithelium (epithelial tissue) covers body surfaces, lines body cavities, and forms glands. Typically, glands are classified into two major groups according to how their products are released: • Exocrine glands secrete their products onto a surface directly or through epithelial ducts or tubes that are connected to a surface. Ducts may convey the secreted material in an unaltered form or may modify the secretion by concentrating it or adding or reabsorbing constituent substances. • Endocrine glands lack a duct system. They secrete their products into the connective tissue, from which they enter the bloodstream to reach their target cells. The products of endocrine glands are called hormones. Cells of exocrine glands exhibit different mechanisms of secretion • Merocrine secretion. This secretory product is delivered in membrane-bounded vesicles to the apical surface of the cell. Here vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane and extrude their contents by exocytosis. This is the most common mechanism of secretion. • Apocrine secretion. The secretory product is released in the apical portion of the cell, surrounded by a thin layer of cytoplasm within an envelope of plasma membrane. This mechanism of secretion is found in the lactating mammary gland, where it is responsible for releasing large lipid droplets into the milk. It also occurs in the apocrine glands of skin, ciliary (Moll’s) glands of the eyelid, and the ceruminous glands of the external auditory meatus. • Holocrine secretion. The secretory product accumulates within the maturing cell, which simultaneously undergoes programmed cell death. Both secretory products and cell debris are discharged into the lumen of the gland. This mechanism is found in sebaceous glands of skin and the tarsal (Meibomian) glands of the eyelid. Exocrine glands are classified as either unicellular or multicellular Unicellular glands are the simplest in structure A typical example is the goblet cell, a mucus-secreting cell positioned among other columnar cells Multicellular glands are composed of more than one cell. They exhibit varying degrees of complexity. Their structural organization allows subclassification according to the arrangement of the secretory cells (parenchyma) and the presence or absence of branching of the duct elements. If the duct is unbranched, the gland is called simple; if the duct is branched, it is called compound. If the secretory portion is shaped like a tube, the gland is tubular; if it is shaped like a flask, the gland is alveolar or acinar; if the tube ends in a saclike dilation, the gland is tubuloalveolar. Most epithelial cells have a finite life span less than that of the whole organism The replacement cells are produced by mitotic activity of self-maintaining adult stem cells The stratified squamous epithelium of skin is replaced in most sites during a period of approximately 28 days. Thank you for attention