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Lecture 5 Tissues Histology • How we examine tissues: Teased, smeared or squashed samples, scraped – we are looking at whole cells Thin sections – very thin sections of the tissue are made using a microtome after tissue has been either frozen or embedded in some sort of solid substance like wax or plastic – Staining – In either case stains are used so enhance contrast in the specimen • What you need to know about tissues • Appearance – be able to identify from photograph or possibly microscope slide • Where it might be found – specific example • Kinds of cells involved • Other details as cell types present, cilia, microvilli, etc. – see histology handout Four Tissue Types • Tissue – group of similarly specialized cells performing a similar function. • • • • Epithelial Muscle Connective Nervous • • • • • Epithelial Tissue Functions: protection, absorption, secretion Cover all virtually all body surfaces, in and out Lack vascular supply Classified based on shape and stacking of cells Generally supported on a basement membrane (& connective tissue) Classification of epithelial tissues 1) Cell shape (at free surface) a) squamous - flat cells b) cuboidal - cube shaped c) columnar - column shaped Reminders: -histology = thin section of a 3D object -there are MANY tissues on each slide Classification of epithelial tissues 2) Cell layers/arrangement a) simple - a single layer - relatively thin/fragile - found lining internal structures - simple squamous epithelium pictured here b) stratified w/out -multiple layers -thicker -may be in areas w/ stress -stratified squamous epithelium keratin pictured here Name this epithelial tissue: Cell arrangement/layers…….Shape of cells at surface Name this epithelial tissue: Pseudostratified Columnar (Fig 3.6.b): -Lining much of the respiratory tract -often have cilia & goblet cells -looks layered BUT there is really only 1 layer of cells with nuclei at different heights Name this epithelial tissue: Cell arrangement/layers…….Shape of cells at surface Name this epithelial tissue: Figure 3.6b • Glands • Two types: How do they differ? – Endocrine – Exocrine • Classification of exocrine glands – Means of secretion • Merocrine • Apocrine • Holocrine – Complexity of structure Connective Tissue • Most abundant tissue in body • Not on free surfaces • Cells separated in a matrix (ground substance + fibers) • Good nerve & blood supply (except cartilage & tendons- dense connective) • Classified based on matrix components, arrangement and type of protein fibers Connective Tissues Connective Tissue Proper Loose Dense Fluid Connective Tissue Blood Lymph Support Connective Tissue Cartilage Bone Connective Tissue Proper – Loose • Areolar: – Highly vascular – Semi-liquid ground substance – Cushions, subcutaneous, deep to digestive, respiratory, etc. • Adipose – As areolar, but more adipocytes – Cushions, energy storage • Reticular – Reticular fibers, macrophages, fibroblasts – Stroma of liver, spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow Connective Tissue Proper: Loose Connective Tissue Adipose and Adipocytes – Develop from areolar connective – ‘on demand’ – Metabolically active – May ‘deflate’ but do not go away – Store lipids as energy reserve Dense Connective Tissue • High concentration of collagenous fibers • Two types: – Dense regular • Tendons – muscle to bone • Aponeuroses – broad sheets • Elastic tissue – resilience – walls of blood vessels • Ligaments – bone to bone – Dense Irregular • Reinforcement of skin, capsules surrounding internal organs, cavities of joints Cartilage – 3 types • Hyaline – ends of ribs, synovial joint surfaces, fetal skeleton – Stiff, flexible • Elastic – examples: ear, epiglottis – Resiliant and flexible • Fibrocartilage – in knee joint, pubic sympysis, intervetrebral discs, involved in bone repair – Resists compression, provides some flexibility in joint Hyaline Cartilage • • • • Bluish-shiny white rubbery substance Chondrocytes sit in spaces called lacunae No blood vessels or nerves so repair is very slow Reduces friction at joints as articular cartilage Fibrocartilage • Many more collagen fibers causes rigidity & stiffness • Strongest type of cartilage (intervertebral discs) Elastic Cartilage • Elastic fibers help maintain shape after deformations • Ear, nose, vocal cartilages Muscle further discussion in later sections • Specialized cells containing myosin and actin (protein) fibers which produce contractions or movement • Types: • Smooth – involuntary – lack striations ----Two types with striations----------• Skeletal – voluntary muscle; have cross striations and responsible for body movement • Cardiac – only found in heart – branched cells bound end to end by intercalated discs Nervous Tissue • Involved in sensing and conducting and analysis of information • Two cell classes: • Neurons – which conduct impulses • Neuroglia – which support neurons by providing support, protection and nourishment • Further Discussion with nervous system