Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

63
Tissues: Tissues: The living The living fabric fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue

Transcript of Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Page 1: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Tissues: Tissues: The living fabricThe living fabric

Ch 4 aEpithelial Tissue

Page 2: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 3: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Tissues

• Histology = Study of tissues• Tissue = Groups of cells

similar in structure and function

• The four types of tissues–Epithelial - covering–Connective - support–Muscle - movement–Nerve - control

Page 4: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelial Tissue

•2 types–Covering and lining epithelium

–Glandular epithelium

Page 5: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelial TissueEpithelial Tissue

Covering and lining epithelium

Page 6: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelial Tissue

•A sheet of cells that covers a body surface or lines a body cavity

•Forms boundaries between different environments

Page 7: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelial Tissue Functions

•Protection•Absorption•Filtration•Excretion•Secretion (from glands)

•Sensory reception

Page 8: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Characteristics of Epithelial Tissue

•Cellularity – composed almost entirely of cells–Very little extracellular material

•Special contacts – form continuous sheets held together by tight junctions and desmosomes

Page 9: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Characteristics of Epithelial Tissue

•Polarity – apical and basal surfaces–Apical = free upper surface exposed to exterior of body or cavity (some are slick, some have cilia, most have microvilli)

–Basal = lower surface attached

Page 10: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Characteristics of Epithelial Tissue

•Basal surface attached to basement membrane–basal laminae – thin, adhesive, non-cellular

–reticular laminae – fine network of collagen fibers belonging to the connective tissue underneath, non-cellular

Page 11: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Characteristics of Epithelial Tissue

•All epithelial tissue are supported by and rest upon connective tissue

Page 12: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Characteristics of Epithelial Tissue

•Avascular but innervated – contains no blood vessels but supplied by nerve fibers – nourished by diffusion

•Regenerative – rapidly replaces lost cells by cell division

Page 13: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Classification of Epithelia

•Simple •stratified

Figure 4.1a

Page 14: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Classification of Epithelia

•Squamous

•Cuboidal

•Columnar

Figure 4.1b

Page 15: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Squamous

•Single layer of flattened cells with disc-shaped nuclei and sparse cytoplasm

Page 16: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Squamous

•Functions –Diffusion and filtration–Provide a slick, friction-reducing lining in lymphatic and cardiovascular systems

•Present in the kidneys, lungs, lining of heart, blood vessels, lymphatic vessels

Page 17: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Squamous

Figure 4.2a

Page 18: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Cuboidal

•Single layer of cubelike cells with large, spherical central nuclei

•Function in secretion and absorption

•Present in kidney tubules, ducts and secretory portions of small glands, and ovary surface

Page 19: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Cuboidal

Figure 4.2b

• Single layer of cubelike cells with large, spherical central nuclei

• Function in secretion and absorption• Present in kidney tubules, ducts and

secretory portions of small glands, and ovary surface

Page 20: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Columnar

•Single layer of tall cells with oval nuclei; many contain cilia

•Goblet cells are often found in this layer

–Cells that secrete a protective lubricating mucus

•Function in absorption and secretion

Page 21: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Columnar

•Nonciliated type line digestive tract and gallbladder

•Ciliated type line small bronchi, uterine tubes, and some regions of the uterus

•Cilia help move substances through internal passageways

Page 22: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Simple Columnar

Figure 4.2c

Page 23: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Pseudostratified Columnar

•Single layer of cells with different heights; some do not reach the free surface

•Nuclei are seen at different layers

Page 24: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Pseudostratified Columnar

•Function in secretion and propulsion of mucus

•Present in the male sperm-carrying ducts (nonciliated) and trachea (ciliated)

Page 25: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Pseudostratified Columnar

Figure 4.2d

• Single layer of cells with different heights; some do not reach the free surface

• Nuclei are seen at different layers• Function in secretion and propulsion of

mucus• Present in the male sperm-carrying

ducts (nonciliated) and trachea (ciliated)

Page 26: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Stratified Squamous

•Thick membrane composed of several layers of cells

•Function in protection of underlying areas subjected to abrasion

Page 27: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Stratified Squamous

•Forms the external part of the skin’s epidermis (keratinized cells), and linings of the esophagus, mouth, and vagina (nonkeratinized cells)

Page 28: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Stratified Squamous

Figure 4.2e

• Thick membrane composed of several layers of cells

• Function in protection of underlying areas subjected to abrasion

• Forms the external part of the skin’s epidermis (keratinized cells), and linings of the esophagus, mouth, and vagina (nonkeratinized cells)

Page 29: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Stratified Cuboidal

•Stratified cuboidal–Quite rare in the body–Found in some sweat and mammary glands

–Typically two cell layers thick

Page 30: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Stratified Columnar

•Stratified columnar –Limited distribution in the body–Found in the pharynx, male urethra, and lining some glandular ducts

–Also occurs at transition areas between two other types of epithelia

Page 31: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Transitional

•Several cell layers, basal cells are cuboidal, surface cells are dome shaped

•Stretches to permit the distension of the urinary bladder

•Lines the urinary bladder, ureters, and part of the urethra

Page 32: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Transitional

Figure 4.2f

• Several cell layers, basal cells are cuboidal, surface cells are dome shaped

• Stretches to permit the distension of the urinary bladder

• Lines the urinary bladder, ureters, and part of the urethra

Page 33: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelial TissueEpithelial Tissue

Glandular Epithelia

Page 34: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Glandular

• A gland is one or more cells that makes and secretes an aqueous fluid

Page 35: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Epithelia: Glandular

• Glands Classified by:–Site of product release –

•Endocrine (internally secreting) or Exocrine (externally secreting)

–Relative number of cells forming the gland – •Unicellular (one cell) & Multicellular (many cells)

Page 36: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Endocrine Glands

•Ductless glands that produce hormones

•Secretions include amino acids, proteins, glycoproteins, and steroids

Page 37: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Exocrine Glands

•More numerous than endocrine glands

•Secrete their products onto body surfaces (skin) or into body cavities

Page 38: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Exocrine Glands

•Examples include mucous, sweat, oil, and salivary glands, the liver (which secrets bile), the pancreas (which secrets enzymes) and others

Page 39: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Unicellular Exocrine Glands

•The only important unicellular exocrine gland is the goblet cell–Found in linings of intestinal and respiratory tracts

–Secrets mucus

Page 40: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Multicellular Exocrine Glands

•Multicellular exocrine glands are composed of a duct and secretory unit

•Classified according to:–Simple or compound duct type–Structure of their secretory units

Page 41: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Figure 4.3a-d

Structural Classification of Multicellular Exocrine

Glands

Page 42: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Structural Classification of Multicellular Exocrine

Glands

Figure 4.3e-g

Page 43: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Modes of Secretion•Merocrine – products are

secreted by exocytosis (e.g., pancreas, sweat, and salivary glands)

•Holocrine – products are secreted by the rupture of gland cells (e.g., sebaceous glands)

Page 44: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Modes of Secretion

Figure 4.4Merocrine Holocrine

Page 45: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7z2vYr5YjD8

Page 46: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 47: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Simple cuboidal epithelium

Page 48: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 49: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Simple cuboidal epithelium

Page 50: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 51: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Transitional epithelium

Page 52: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 53: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Transitional epithelium

Page 54: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 55: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Pseudostratified epithelium

Page 56: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 57: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Stratified squamous epithelium

Page 58: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

What tissue is

this?

Page 59: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 60: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.
Page 61: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Simple columnar epithelial tissue

Page 62: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

Quiz – Next Quiz – Next time!time!

I will be checking study guides up to 1-

8

Page 63: Tissues: The living fabric Ch 4 a Epithelial Tissue.

• Ap = tip• Areola = space• Basal =

foundation• Blast = forming• Chyme = juice• Crine = separate• Endo = within• Epi = upon, over• Glia = glue

• Holo = whole• Hormon = excite• Hyal = glass• Lamina = thin

plate• Mero = part• Meso = middle• Retic = network• Sero = watery fluid• Squam = a scale• Strat = layer