I. Introduction
A. Introduction
1. Cells are organized into layers or groups of similar cells with a common function called tissues.
2. The four major types of tissues of the human body are epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous.
II. Epithelial Tissues
A. General Characteristics
1. Epithelium covers the body surface and organs, forms glandular tissues and lines internal organs.
2. Epithelial tissue always has a free surface.
3. The underside of epithelial tissue is anchored by a basement membrane to connective tissue.
4. Epithelial tissue lacks blood vessels.
5. Because epithelial tissue cells divide rapidly, its injuries heal rapidly.
6. Epithelial cells are tightly packed.
7. In many places, desmosomes attach epithelial cells together.
8. Epithelial cell functions include protection, secretion, absorption, and excretion.
9. Epithelial tissues are classified according to the shape and numbers of layers of cells.
10. Squamous cells are thin and flat, cuboidal cells are cubelike, and columnar cells are elongated.
11. Epithelial tissues with single layers of cells are simple and those with two or more cell layers are stratified.
B. Simple Squamous Epithelium
1. Simple squamous epithelium consists of one layer of flat cells.
2. Substances pass easily through simple squamous epithelium.
3. Examples of places you find simple squamous epithelium are alveoli of lungs and walls capillaries.
C. Simple Cuboidal Epithelium
1. Simple cuboidal epithelium consists of one layer of cube-shaped cells.
2. Simple cuboidal epithelium is located lining the follicles of the thyroid glands, covering the ovaries, and lining kidney tubules and ducts of certain glands.
D. Simple Columnar Epithelium
1. Simple columnar epithelium is composed of one layer of elongated cells.
2. The cells of simple columnar can be ciliated or nonciliated.
3. Cilia extend from the free surfaces and move constantly.
4. Cilia aid in moving eggs through the uterine tubes to the uterus.
5. Nonciliated simple columnar epithelium lines the uterus and portions of the digestive tract.
6. Simple columnar can secrete digestive fluids and absorbs nutrients from digested foods.
7. Microvilli are tiny cylindrical processes extending from the free surfaces of simple columnar epithelium.
8. Microvilli function to increase the surface area of an epithelium.
9. Goblet cells are flask-shaped glandular cells and secrete mucus.
E. Pseudostratified Columnar Epithelium
1. The cells of pseudostratified columnar epithelium appear layered but they are not.
2. Pseudostratified columnar epithelial cells have cilia.
3. Goblet cells scattered throughout secrete mucus.
4. Pseudostratified columnar epithelium is located in portions of the respiratory tract.
F. Stratified Squamous Epithelium
1. Stratified epithelium is named for the shape of the cells forming the outermost layers.
2. Cells nearest the free surface of stratified squamous are flattened while cells in the deeper layers are cuboidal or columnar.
3. Stratified squamous that accumulates keratin is located as the outermost layer of skin.
4. Keratin is protein.
5. Keratinization produces a covering of dry, tough, protective material that prevents water and other substances from escaping from underlying tissues and blocks chemicals and microorganisms from entering.
6. Stratified squamous epithelium that does not accumulate keratin is located lining the oral cavity, esophagus, vagina, and anal canal.
G. Stratified Cuboidal Epithelium
1. Stratified cuboidal epithelium consists of two or three layers of cubelike cells.
2. Stratified cuboidal epithelium is located lining ducts of mammary glands, sweat glands, salivary glands, and pancreas.
H. Stratified Columnar Epithelium
1. Stratified columnar epithelium consists of several layers of elongated and cubelike cells.
2. Stratified columnar epithelium is located in part of the male urethra, and parts of the pharynx.
I. Transitional Epithelium
1. Transitional epithelium is specialized to change in response to increased tension.
2. Transitional epithelium forms the lining of the urinary bladder, the ureters, and part of the urethra.
3. When the wall of the bladder contracts, the transitional epithelium consists of several layers of cuboidal cells.
4. When the wall of the bladder is distended, the transitional epithelium appears to contain only a few layers of cells.
J. Glandular Epithelium
1. Glandular epithelium is composed of cells that are specialized to produce and secrete substances into ducts or into body fluids.
2. Exocrine glands secrete their products into ducts that open onto a surface.
3. Endocrine glands secrete their products into tissue fluid or blood.
4. An example of a unicellular exocrine gland is a goblet cell.
5. Multicellular exocrine glands are divided into simple and compound glands.
6. A simple gland communicates with the surface by means of a duct that does
not branch before it reaches the glandular cells or secretory portion, and a
compound gland has a duct that branches repeatedly before reaching
the secretory portion.
7. Tubular glands are glands that consist of epithelial-lined tubes.
8. Alveolar glands are glands whose terminal portions from saclike dilations.
9. Merocrine glands release fluids by exocytosis.
10. Apocrine glands release small portions of their glandular cell bodies.
11. Holocrine glands release entire cells.
12. The secretion of a serous cell is watery and has a high concentration of enzymes.
13. The secretion of a mucous cell is mucus.
III. Connective Tissues
A. General Characteristics
1. Connective tissues function to bind structures, provide support and protect, serve as frameworks, fill spaces, store fat, produce blood cells, protect against infections, and help repair tissue damage.
2. Matrix of connective tissue is extracellular material.
3. Matrix consists of fibers and a ground substance.
4. Connective tissues have varying degrees of vascularity.
B. Major Cell Types
1. Examples of fixed cells are fibroblasts and mast cell.
2. An example of a wandering cell is a macrophage.
3. A fibroblast is the most common kind of fixed cell in connective tissues.
4. Fibroblasts produce fibers.
5. Macrophages originate as white blood cells.
6. Macrophages are specialized for phagocytosis.
7. Mast cells are usually located near blood vessels.
8. Heparin functions to prevent blood clotting.
9. Histamine functions to promote some of the reactions associated with inflammation and allergies.
C. Connective Tissue Fibers
1. The three types of fibers produced by fibroblasts are collagenous, elastic, and reticular.
2. Collagenous fibers are thick threads of the protein collagen.
3. Collagenous fibers have great tensile strength.
4. Collagenous fibers are important components of body parts that hold structures together such as ligaments and tendons.
5. Dense connective tissue contains abundant collagenous fibers.
6. Loose connective tissue has sparse collagenous fibers.
7. Elastic fibers are composed of bundles of microfibrils embedded in a protein called elastin.
8. Elastic fibers are common in body parts that are normally subjected to stretching.
9. Examples of places you fine elastic fibers are vocal cords and air passages of the respiratory system.
10. Reticular fibers are very thin collagenous fibers.
11. They are highly branched and form delicate supporting networks in a variety of tissues including those of the spleen.
D. Categories of Connective Tissues
1. The two categories of connective tissues are connective tissue proper and specialized connective tissues.
2. Connective tissue proper includes loose connective tissue, adipose tissue, reticular connective tissue, dense connective tissue, and elastic connective tissue.
3. Specialized connective tissue includes cartilage, bone, and blood.
E. Loose Connective Tissue
1. Loose connective tissue is located beneath most layers of epithelium, in thin membranes throughout the body, beneath skin, and between muscles.
2. Most cells of loose connective tissue are fibroblasts.
3. Loose connective tissue functions to bind skin to underlying organs and to fill space between muscles. It also nourishes nearby epithelial cells.
F. Adipose Tissue
1. Adipocytes are cells that store fat.
2. Adipose tissue is located beneath the skin, around the kidneys, behind the eyeballs, and on the surface of the heart.
3. Adipose tissue functions to protect, insulate, and store fat.
G. Reticular Connective Tissue
1. Reticular connective tissue is composed of reticular fibers.
2. Reticular connective tissue supports the walls of the liver, spleen, and lymphatic organs
H. Dense Connective Tissue
1. Dense connective tissue consists of many closely packed, thick, collagenous fibers, a fine network of elastic fibers, and a few cells, most of which are fibroblasts
2. Subclasses of dense connective tissue are regular and irregular
3. Regular dense connective tissue binds body parts together as parts of tendons and ligaments.
4. Irregular dense connective tissue is located in the dermis.
I. Elastic Connective Tissue
1. Elastic connective tissue consists of yellow, elastic fibers, some collagenous fibers, and fibroblasts.
2. Elastic connective tissue is located in the attachments between bones of the spinal column, in the layers within the walls of certain hollow internal organs, including the larger arteries, some portions of the heart and larger airways.
J. Cartilage
1. Cartilage is a rigid connective tissue.
2. Cartilage provides support, frameworks, attachments, protects underlying tissues, and forms structural models for many developing bones.
3. Cartilage extracellular matrix is composed of collagenous fibers embedded in a gel-like ground substance.
4. Cartilage cells are called chondrocytes.
5. Lacunae are small chambers in cartilage.
6. Perichondrium is connective tissue covering of cartilage.
7. Cartilage lacks a blood supply.
8. Three types of cartilage are hyaline cartilage, elastic cartilage, and fibrocartilage.
9. The most common type of cartilage is hyaline.
10. Hyaline cartilage has very fine collagenous fibers in its extracellular matrix.
11. Hyaline cartilage is located on the ends of bones, in the soft part of the nose, in the supporting rings of the respiratory passages, and in the embryo’s skeleton.
12. Elastic cartilage has a dense network of elastic fibers in its extracellular matrix.
13. Elastic cartilage is located in parts of the larynx and as the framework for the external ear.
14. Fibrocartilage has many large collagenous fibers in its matrix.
15. Fibrocartilage is located between vertebrae, in the knee joints, and the pelvic girdle.
K. Bone
1. Bone is the most rigid connective tissue.
2. The hardness of bone is due to mineral salts such as calcium phosphate.
3. Bone functions to support body structures, protect vital structures of the cranial and thoracic cavities, and as attachment sites for muscles. It also stores inorganic substances such as calcium and phosphorus and produces blood cells.
4. Bone matrix is deposited by bone cells called osteoblasts.
5. Lamellae are thin layers of bone formed by osteoblasts.
6. Osteoblasts form lamellae around capillaries located within tiny longitudinal tubes called central, or Haversian canals.
7. Osteoblasts are located in lacunae where they mature into osteocytes
and are rather evenly spaced within the lamellae.
8. An osteon is a cylinder-shaped unit of compact bone. It contains a central canal, lamella, and osteocytes.
9. A central canal of an osteon contains blood vessels and nerves.
10. Canaliculi are minute tubes in the extracellular matrix of bone.
11. Processes of osteocytes extend through canaliculi.
12. Gap junctions attach osteocyte cellular processes together so that materials can move between blood vessels and bone cells.
L. Blood
1. Blood is composed of cells that are suspended in a fluid extracellular matrix called plasma.
2. Plasma is the fluid part of blood.
3. Cell types of blood are red blood cells, white blood cells, and cellular fragments called platelets.
4. Red blood cells function to transport gases.
5. White blood cells function to fight infection.
6. Platelets function to produce blood clots.
IV. Types of Membranes
A. Epithelial membranes are composed of epithelial and underlying connective tissues.
B. Three types of epithelial membranes are serous, mucous, and cutaneous.
C. Serous membranes line the body cavities that do not open to the outside, reducing friction between organs and cavity walls and secrete serous fluid.
D. Mucous membranes line the cavities and tubes that open to the outside of the body.
E. The cutaneous membrane is more commonly called skin.
F. Some membranes are composed entirely of connected tissue. These include synovial membranes lining joints.
V. Muscle Tissues
A. General Characteristics
1. Cells in muscle tissues are sometimes called muscle fibers due to their elongated shape.
2. Muscle tissues are contractile, meaning they can shorten and thicken.
3. The three types of muscle tissue are skeletal, smooth, and cardiac.
B. Skeletal Muscle Tissue
1. Skeletal muscle tissue forms muscles that usually attach to bones.
2. Skeletal muscle tissue is under conscious control and is therefore called voluntary.
3. Striations of skeletal muscle tissue are alternating light and dark cross-markings.
4. Skeletal muscle tissue functions to move body parts and in swallowing and breathing.
C. Smooth Muscle Tissue
1. Smooth muscle tissue is called smooth because it lacks striations.
2. Smooth muscle tissue is located in walls of most hollow internal organs.
3. Smooth muscle is involuntary because it cannot be consciously controlled.
D. Cardiac Muscle Tissue
1. Cardiac muscle tissue is located only in the heart.
2. An intercalated disc is a specialized intercellular junction located only in cardiac muscle tissue.
3. Like skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle is striated but unlike skeletal muscle it
is branched.
4. Like smooth muscle, cardiac muscle is involuntary.
VI. Nervous Tissues
A. Nervous tissues are found in the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves.
B. The basic cells of nervous tissue are neurons.
C. In addition to neurons, nervous tissue also includes neuroglial cells.
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