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Tissues, organs, and organ system Which of the following are never multicellular? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Fungi Animals Plants Bacteria All can be multicellular Outline • • • • • Stem cells Kinds of Tissues Organs Organ systems Homeostasis All human life begins with a single cell All the cells of your body come from that single cell • The process by which one cell becomes many kinds of cells is called differentiation • There are approximately 200 cell types in the human body • And 100 trillion cells Cell differentiation becomes more and more specific during development • Cells which can differentiate into any kind of cell are called totipotent • Cells which can differentiate into more than one cell are called pluripotent Cells differentiate according to signals from their neighbors • One of the major promises of stem cells comes from this fact • Stem cells can thus be used to heal damaged tissue, such as nervous tissue, cardiac tissue, or bone marrow Tissues Groups of similar cells working toward a common task There are four major types of human tissue • • • • Epithelial Connective Muscle Nervous Epithelial tissue forms body surfaces and lines body cavities • • • • Squamous tissue- flat, easily passed Cuboidal- cube-shaped, often secretory Columnar- Oblong, often formed in glands Ciliated- featuring cilia Epithelial tissue is bound to connective tissues by a basement membrane • Basement membrane- acellular surface made of proteins and polysaccharides • Usually connects epithelia to loose connective tissue Epithelial cells can form glands • A gland- a collection of cells which secrete a product • Exocrine- release substances through ducts or tubes Endocrine glands secrete hormones directly into the body • Hormone- a signalling chemical which is released in one part of the body and affects another part of the body • Examples- Insulin, Follicle stimulating hormone, testosterone Connective tissues are diverse in structure • They include bone, cartilage, adipose tissue (fat cells), blood, etc. • Most connective tissue exists in an extracellular matrix • Fibers add flexibility, durability, and strength Collagen adds tensile strength, elastin flexibility The extracellular matrix often determines the properties of connective tissues • Fibrous connective tissues • Loose• Dense • Elastic Adipocytes have very little extracellular matrix • Sits beneath skin • Provides insulation, energy storage • Also protects organs Bone is a kind of connective tissue • Osteocytes are surrouned by a matrix rich in collagen and calcium • Chondrocytes of cartilage • Blood is also a tissue Muscle tissue • Contractile tissue • For movement of body, blood, organs • Three major kinds – Smooth – Skeletal – Cardiac • All contain actin and myosin fibers for contraction Smooth muscle • Involuntary muscle • Forms contractile linings of organs and blood vessels • Found in digestive system, e. g. esophagus Skeletal muscle • Mounted on bones for body movement • Striated • Mostly voluntary (sometimes involuntary, e. g. reflexes) • Individual muscles wrapped in connective tissue sheath Cardiac muscle • Involuntary muscle of the heart • Cells communicate with each other closely to allow simultaneous contraction • Irregular striations Skeletal, cardiac muscle striations are bands of actin and myosin Neurons carry messages • Neurons are the basic unit of the nervous system • Many connections are the cause of brain’s complexity • Length increases speed and fidelity of communication • Neurons communicate with electrochemical signals Generalized neuron structure Glial cells provide support • Schwann cells provide protection, electric insulation • Astrocytes provide nutrition The cells in tissues are held together with transmembrane proteins • Tight junctions- ensures passage of substances through cells • Adhering junctions allow stretching • Gap junctions- allow cell-to-cell communication between adjacent cells in a tissues Protein junctions bind membrane layers to a basement membrane • Tight junctions usually sit higher- prevent leakage • Adherens band form a ring around epidermal cells in membrane • Hemidesmosomes bind epithelial cells to basement membrane • Gap junctions allow communication between cells Membranes cover and protect organs and other surfaces • Two major kinds of membranes: – Epithelial – Connective tissue • Two major kinds of epithelial membranes: – Mucous: contain glands to secrete substances – Serous: secrete only serous fluid Fig. 4.7, p. 75 When a fertilized egg begins to divide, which cells form first? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. bone marrow Adipose stem cells neural heart 20% 1 20% 20% 2 3 20% 4 20% 5 Muscle that is NOT striped and is involuntary is 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. cardiac. 20% skeletal. striated. smooth. both cardiac and smooth. 1 20% 20% 2 3 20% 4 20% 5 Organs • Collections of tissue which form functions together • Heart, kidney, etc. • Contained in body cavities– Cranial/spinal – Thoracic – Abdominal/pelvic The heart is an organ • Main tissue: the tissue forming the greatest mass of the organ • Heart: cardiac muscle • Sporadic tissues: tissues comprising a minority of the mass of the organ • Nervous tissue, connective tissue (blood vessels, etc.) SUPERIOR (of two body parts, the one closer to head) distal (farthest from trunk or from point of origin of a body part) frontal plane (aqua) midsagittal plane (green) proximal (closest to trunk or to point of origin of a body part) ANTERIOR (at or near front of body) POSTERIOR (at or near back of body) Fig. 4.8b, p. 76 INFERIOR (of two body parts, the one farthest from head) transverse plane (yellow) Organ Systems work together toward collections of general tasks Fig. 4.9, p. 77 Lymphatic System Respiratory System Digestive System Urinary System Reproductive System The integumentary system includes the body’s largest organ, the skin • Many kinds of tissue, each comprised of many kinds of cells • Smooth muscle- for contraction • Adipose cellsconnective tissue • Sweat/sebaceous glands (endocrine or exocrine?) Functions of the skin • Protect body from foreign invaders • Protect against • Detect environmental information • Regulate temperature • Synthesize vitamin D There are 3 basic layers to the skin • Epidermis, dermis, and hypodermis • Epidermis- source of structures such as hair follicles, sweat/sebaceous glands • Made mostly of keratinocytes, • Melanocytes give skin its color There are 5 basic layers to epidermis • Corneum, lucidum, granulosum, spinosum, and basale • Corneum stratum: – stratified sqamous epithelium – empty, dead cells • Lucidum- Only in callous forming regions • Spinosum- cells are keratinized • Basale- source of “Epidermal stem cells” There are 3 basic layers to the skin • Dermis – – – – – mostly loose connective tissue Provides flexibility Vascularized Nerve endings terminate Separation of dermis from epidermis causes a blister • Hypodermis/subcutis: – Fatty tissue (50% of body) – Connects skin to bone or muscle One cm2 has: • • • • • • • • 200 nerve endings 100 sweat glands 10 hairs with muscles 15 oil glands 12 heat receptors 25 pressure receptors 2 cold receptors 3 blood vessels Activity-Determine the resolving power of skin • Procedure 1. Prepare 4 tape-bound pin pairs, d = .3cm, .5cm, 1.0cm, 1.5cm 2. Determine resolution at ~high fidelity (.8 or better) for: fingertips, back of hand, forearm, back of neck 3. Record data 4. Present results 5. Interpret results Epidermal/dermal layers in closeup Which of the following statements is false concerning the outermost layer of the epidermis? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. It is the first to experience any abrasion. Keratin provides waterproofing. Millions of cells are worn off daily. Its cells are undergoing rapid cell division. It is called the stratum corneum. Homeostasis Homeostasis means “staying the same” • Recall: Living things do not exist at equilibrium • Living things do exist at “steady state” • Living things work to maintain a stable internal environment A closed system eventually reaches equilibrium G < 0 A closed hydroelectric system G = 0 The body works to maintain a constant, stable internal environment • This requires changes to account for an unstable external environment • Homeostatic mechanisms exist throughout the body • Temperature, blood pH, dO2, [glucose], etc. are all regulated by negative feedback A thermostat operates by negative feedback • The classic homeostatic mechanism analogy • How does it work? • What mechanisms must it contain in order to function properly? • What is its cost? hormonal signals from “thermostat” centers in hypothalamus motor neurons skeletal muscles smooth muscles in arterioles in skin sweat glands voluntary changes in behavior muscle tone, shivering vasoconstriction, vasodilation sweating adjustments in heat gain or heat loss adjustments in muscle activity (in metabolic heat output) adjustment in loss or conservation of metabolic heat adjustment in heat loss Fig. 4.14c, p. 82 The price of minimizing entropy is the constant expenditure of free energy Why do you think homeostasis with respect to temperature and pH might be important? Think of mechanisms and structures which might depend on a stable internal environment. A few human body mechanisms operate on positive feedback • Some are regulated by positive feedback Other Positive feedback mechanisms in real life More positive feeback loops A large increase in the body’s core temperature will cause what change in proteins? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Denaturation an increase in function Replication doubling of the rate of a reaction a small reduction in the rate of reaction Which of the following involves a positive feedback mechanism? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. temperature control childbirth glucose concentration absorption of toxins muscle concentration