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Histology

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Histology Study of Tissues Epithelial Tissue Connective Tissue Nervous and Muscular Tissue Intercellular Junctions, Glands and Membranes Tissue Growth, Development ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Histology


1
Histology
  • Study of Tissues
  • Epithelial Tissue
  • Connective Tissue
  • Nervous and Muscular Tissue
  • Intercellular Junctions, Glands and Membranes
  • Tissue Growth, Development, Death and Repair

2
The Study of Tissues
  • 200 Different cell types
  • Four primary tissue classes
  • epithelial tissue
  • connective tissue
  • muscular tissue
  • nervous tissue
  • Histology (microscopic anatomy)
  • study of tissues organ formation
  • Organ structure with discrete boundaries
  • composed of 2 or more tissue types

3
Features of Tissue Classes
  • Tissue similar cells and cell products
  • arose from same region of embryo
  • Differences between tissue classes
  • types and functions of cells
  • characteristics of matrix (extracellular
    material)
  • fibrous proteins
  • ground substance
  • clear gels (ECF, tissue fluid, interstitial
    fluid, tissue gel)
  • rubbery or stony in cartilage or bone
  • space occupied by cells versus matrix
  • connective tissue cells are widely separated
  • little matrix between epithelial and muscle cells

4
Tissue Techniques and Sectioning
  • Preparation of histological specimens
  • fixative prevents decay (formalin)
  • sliced into thin sections 1 or 2 cells thick
  • mounted on slides and colored with histological
    stain
  • stains bind to different cellular components
  • Sectioning reduces 3-dimensional structure to
    2-dimensional slice

5
Sectioning Solid Objects
  • Sectioning a cell with a centrally located
    nucleus
  • Some slices miss the cell nucleus
  • In some the nucleus is smaller

6
Sectioning Hollow Structures
  • Cross section of blood vessel, gut, or other
    tubular organ.
  • Longitudinal section of a sweat gland. Notice
    what a single slice could look like.

7
Types of Tissue Sections
  • Longitudinal section
  • tissue cut along longest direction of organ
  • Cross section
  • tissue cut perpendicular to length of organ
  • Oblique section
  • tissue cut at angle between cross and
    longitudinal section

8
Epithelial Tissue
  • Layers of closely adhering cells
  • Flat sheet with upper surface exposed to the
    environment or an internal body cavity
  • No blood vessels
  • underlying connective tissue supplies oxygen
  • Rests on basement membrane
  • thin layer of collagen and adhesive proteins
  • anchors epithelium to connective tissue

9
Simple Versus Stratified Epithelia
  • Stratified epithelium
  • contains more than one layer
  • named by shape of apical cells
  • Simple epithelium
  • contains one layer of cells
  • named by shape of cells

10
Simple Squamous Epithelium
  • Single row of flat cells
  • Permits diffusion of substances
  • Secretes serous fluid
  • Alveoli, glomeruli, endothelium, and serosa

11
Simple Cuboidal Epithelium
  • Single row cube-shaped cells with microvilli
  • Absorption and secretion, mucus production
  • Liver, thyroid, mammary and salivary glands,
    bronchioles, and kidney tubules

12
Simple Columnar Epithelium
  • Single row tall, narrow cells
  • oval nuclei in basal half of cell
  • Absorption and secretion mucus secretion
  • Lining of GI tract, uterus, kidney and uterine
    tubes

13
Pseudostratified Epithelium
  • Single row of cells some not reaching free
    surface
  • nuclei give layer stratified look
  • Secretes and propels respiratory mucus

14
Stratified Epithelia
  • More than one layer of cells
  • Named for shape of surface cells
  • exception is transitional epithelium
  • Deepest cells on basement membrane
  • Variations
  • keratinized epithelium has surface layer of dead
    cells
  • nonkeratinized epithelium lacks the layer of dead
    cells

15
Keratinized Stratified Squamous
  • Multilayered epithelium covered with dead
    squamous cells, packed with keratin
  • epidermal layer of skin
  • Retards water loss and barrier to organisms

16
Nonkeratinized Stratified Squamous
  • Multilayered surface epithelium forming moist,
    slippery layer
  • Tongue, oral mucosa, esophagus and vagina

17
Stratified Cuboidal Epithelium
  • Two or more cell layers surface cells square
  • Secretes sweat produces sperm and hormones
  • Sweat gland ducts ovarian follicles and
    seminiferous tubules

18
Transitional Epithelium
  • Multilayered epithelium surface cells that change
    from round to flat when stretched
  • allows for filling of urinary tract
  • ureter and bladder

19
Connective Tissue
  • Widely spaced cells separated by fibers and
    ground substance
  • Most abundant and variable tissue type
  • Functions
  • connects organs
  • gives support and protection (physical and
    immune)
  • stores energy and produces heat
  • movement and transport of materials

20
Cells of Connective Tissue
  • Fibroblasts produce fibers and ground substance
  • Macrophages phagocytize foreign material and
    activate immune system
  • arise from monocytes (WBCs)
  • Neutrophils wander in search of bacteria
  • Plasma cells synthesize antibodies
  • arise from WBCs
  • Mast cells secrete
  • heparin inhibits clotting
  • histamine that dilates blood vessels
  • Adipocytes store triglycerides

21
Fibers of Connective Tissue
  • Collagen fibers (white fibers)
  • tough, stretch resistant, yet flexible
  • tendons, ligaments and deep layer of the skin
  • Reticular fibers
  • thin, collagen fibers coated with glycoprotein
  • framework in spleen, lymph nodes, marrow
  • Elastic fibers (yellow fibers)
  • thin branching fibers of elastin protein
  • stretch and recoil like rubberband (elasticity)
  • skin, lungs and arteries stretch and recoil

22
Connective Tissue Ground Substance
  • Gelatinous material between cells
  • absorbs compressive forces
  • Consists of 3 classes of large molecules
  • glycosaminoglycans chondroitin sulfate
  • disaccharides that attract sodium and hold water
  • role in regulating water and electrolyte balance
  • Proteoglycan (bottlebrush-shaped molecule)
  • create bonds with cells or extracellular
    macromolecules
  • adhesive glycoproteins
  • protein-carbohydrate complexes bind cell membrane
    to collagen outside the cells

23
Fibrous Connective Tissue Types
  • Loose connective tissue
  • gel-like ground substance between cells
  • types
  • areolar
  • reticular
  • adipose
  • Dense connective tissue
  • fibers fill spaces between cells
  • types vary in fiber orientation
  • dense regular connective tissue
  • dense irregular connective tissue

24
Areolar Tissue
  • Loose arrangement of fibers and cells in
    abundant ground substance
  • Underlies all epithelia, between muscles,
    passageways for nerves and blood vessels

25
Reticular Tissue
  • Loose network of reticular fibers and cells
  • Forms supportive stroma (framework) for lymphatic
    organs
  • Found in lymph nodes, spleen, thymus and bone
    marrow

26
Adipose Tissue
  • Empty-looking cells with thin margins nucleus
    pressed against cell membrane
  • Energy storage, insulation, cushioning
  • subcutaneous fat and organ packing
  • brown fat (hibernating animals) produces heat

27
Dense Regular Connective Tissue
  • Densely, packed, parallel collagen fibers
  • compressed fibroblast nuclei
  • Tendons and ligaments hold bones together and
    attach muscles to bones

28
Dense Irregular Connective Tissue
  • Densely packed, randomly arranged, collagen
    fibers and few visible cells
  • withstands stresses applied in different
    directions
  • deeper layer of skin capsules around organs

29
Cartilage
  • Supportive connective tissue with rubbery matrix
  • Chondroblasts produce matrix
  • called chondrocytes once surrounded
  • No blood vessels
  • diffusion brings nutrients and removes wastes
  • heals slowly
  • Types of cartilage vary with fiber types
  • hyaline, fibrocartilage and elastic cartilage

30
Hyaline Cartilage
  • Rubbery matrix dispersed collagen fibers
    clustered chondrocytes in lacunae
  • supports airway, eases joint movements
  • Ends of bones at movable joints sternal ends of
    ribs supportive material in larynx, trachea,
    bronchi and fetal skeleton

31
Elastic Cartilage
  • Hyaline cartilage with elastic fibers
  • Provides flexible, elastic support
  • external ear and epiglottis

32
Fibrocartilage
  • Hyaline cartilage with extensive collagen fibers
    (never has perichondrium)
  • Resists compression and absorbs shock
  • pubic symphysis, meniscus and intervertebral discs

33
Bone
  • Spongy bone - spongy in appearance
  • delicate struts of bone
  • covered by compact bone
  • found in heads of long bones
  • Compact bone - solid in appearance
  • more complex arrangement
  • cells and matrix surround vertically oriented
    blood vessels in long bones

34
Bone Tissue (compact bone)
  • Calcified matrix in lamellae around central canal
  • Osteocytes in lacunae between lamellae
  • Skeletal support leverage for muscles mineral
    storage

35
Blood
  • Variety of cells and cell fragments some with
    nuclei and some without
  • Nonnucleated pale pink cells or nucleated white
    blood cells
  • Found in heart and blood vessels

36
Nerve Tissue
  • Large cells with long cell processes
  • surrounded by smaller glial cells lacking
    processes
  • Internal communication between cells
  • in brain, spinal cord, nerves and ganglia

37
Muscle Tissue
  • Elongated cells stimulated to contract
  • Exert physical force on other tissues
  • move limbs
  • push blood through a vessel
  • expel urine
  • Source of body heat
  • 3 histological types of muscle
  • skeletal, cardiac and smooth

38
Skeletal Muscle
  • Long, cylindrical, unbranched cells with
    striations and multiple peripheral nuclei
  • movement, facial expression, posture, breathing,
    speech, swallowing and excretion

39
Cardiac Muscle
  • Short branched cells with striations and
    intercalated discs
  • one central nuclei per cell
  • Pumping of blood by cardiac (heart) muscle

40
Smooth Muscle
  • Short fusiform cells nonstriated with only one
    central nucleus
  • sheets of muscle in viscera iris hair follicles
    and sphincters
  • swallowing, GI tract functions, labor
    contractions, control of airflow, erection of
    hairs and control of pupil

41
Intercellular Junctions
  • All cells (except blood) anchored to each other
    or their matrix by intercellular junctions

42
Tight Junctions
  • Encircle the cell joining it to surrounding cells
  • zipperlike complementary grooves and ridges
  • Prevents passage between cells
  • GI and urinary tracts

43
Desmosomes
  • Patch between cells holding them together
  • cells spanned by filaments terminating on protein
    plaque
  • cytoplasmic intermediate filaments also attach to
    plaque
  • Uterus, heart and epidermis

44
Gap Junctions
  • Ring of transmembrane proteins form a
    water-filled channel
  • small solutes pass directly from cell to cell
  • in embryos, cardiac and smooth muscle

45
Endocrine and Exocrine Glands
  • Secrete substances
  • composed of epithelial tissue
  • Exocrine glands connect to surface with a duct
    (epithelial tube)
  • Endocrine glands secrete (hormones) directly into
    bloodstream
  • Mixed organs do both
  • liver, gonads, pancreas
  • Unicellular glands endo or exocrine
  • goblet or intrinsic cells of stomach wall

46
Exocrine Gland Structure
  • Stroma capsule and septa divide gland into
    lobes and lobules
  • Parenchyma cells that secrete
  • Acinus cluster of cells surrounding the duct
    draining those cells

47
Types of Exocrine Glands
  • Simple glands - unbranched duct
  • Compound glands - branched duct
  • Shape of gland
  • acinar - secretory cells form dilated sac
  • tubuloacinar - both tube and sacs

48
Types of Secretions
  • Serous glands
  • produce thin, watery secretions
  • sweat, milk, tears and digestive juices
  • Mucous glands
  • produce mucin that absorbs water to form a sticky
    secretion called mucus
  • Mixed glands contain both cell types
  • Cytogenic glands release whole cells
  • sperm and egg cells

49
Holocrine Gland
  • Secretory cells disintegrate to deliver their
    accumulated product
  • oil-producing glands of the scalp

50
Merocrine and Apocrine Secretion
  • Merocrine glands release their product by
    exocytosis
  • tears, gastric glands, pancreas, etc.
  • Apocrine glands are merocrine glands with
    confusing appearance (apical cytoplasm not lost)
  • mammary and armpit sweat glands

51
Mucous Membranes
  • Epithelium, lamina propria and muscularis mucosae
  • Lines passageways that open to the exterior
    reproductive, respiratory, urinary and digestive
  • Mucous (movement of cilia) trap and remove
    foreign particles and bacteria from internal body
    surfaces

52
Membrane Types
  • Cutaneous membrane skin
  • stratified squamous epithelium over connective
    tissue
  • relatively dry layer serves protective function
  • Synovial membrane lines joint cavities
  • connective tissue layer only, secretes synovial
    fluid
  • Serous membrane (serosa) internal membrane
  • simple squamous epithelium over areolar tissue,
    produces serous fluid
  • covers organs and lines walls of body cavities

53
Tissue Growth
  • Hyperplasia tissue growth through cell
    multiplication
  • Hypertrophy enlargement of preexisting cells
  • muscle grow through exercise
  • Neoplasia growth of a tumor (benign or
    malignant) through growth of abnormal tissue

54
Tissue Repair
  • Regeneration
  • replacement of damaged cells with original cells
  • skin injuries and liver regenerate
  • Fibrosis
  • replacement of damaged cells with scar tissue
  • function is not restored
  • healing muscle injuries, scarring of lung tissue
    in TB or healing of severe cuts and burns of the
    skin
  • keloid is healing with excessive fibrosis (raised
    shiny scars)

55
Wound Healing of a Laceration
  • Damaged vessels leak blood
  • Damaged cells and mast cells leak histamine
  • dilates blood vessels
  • increases blood flow
  • increases capillary permeability
  • Plasma carries antibodies, clotting factors and
    WBCs into wound

56
Wound Healing of a Laceration
  • Clot forms
  • Scab forms on surface
  • Macrophages start to clean up debris

57
Wound Healing of a Laceration
  • New capillaries grow into wound
  • Fibroblasts deposit new collagen to replace old
    material
  • Fibroblastic phase begins in 3-4 days and lasts
    up to 2 weeks

58
Wound Healing of a Laceration
  • Epithelial cells multiply and spread beneath scab
  • Scab falls off
  • Epithelium thickens
  • Connective tissue forms only scar tissue
    (fibrosis)
  • Remodeling phase may last 2 years
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