Basic Tissues Flashcards

1
Q

what is a tissue

A

collection of cells that form a particular function

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2
Q

what are the 4 basic tissues

A
  • epithelia
  • connective
  • nervous (not discussed in this section)
  • muscle
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3
Q

Epithelia key points

A
  • covers services
  • lines cavities and tissue
  • form glands

characteristics:
- attached onto base membrane- avascular cells = no blood vessels in cells themselves
- bound closely together (cellularity)
- regeneration (usually quite rapid)
- polarity (apical side which faces lumen/surface and basal side attached to basement membrane)

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4
Q

classification of epithelia

A

based on -
number of cells:
simple = one layer
stratified = two or more layers

shape of cell:
squamous
cuboidal
columnar

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5
Q

main types of epithelia

A
  • simple squamous
  • keratinised stratified squamous
  • non keratinised stratified squamous
  • simple cuboidal
  • simple columnar
  • pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium w/goblet cells
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6
Q

simple squamous

A
  • flat + oval shaped nuclei
  • one layer of cells
  • used for diffusion cuz so thin

location - blood vessels, alveoli
smooth = so provides smooth flow of blood/air etc.

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7
Q

keratinised stratified squaomous

A

flat surface cells + oval nuclei
- many layers (so is stratified)
- produce keratin on top layer
- used for protection, barrier
(- has multiple layers so if one gone, then it’s okay,
- keratin makes it tougher, waterproof)

location - skin
some oral cavity (where abrasion occurs more)

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8
Q

non-keratinised stratified squaomous

A

same as keratinised but without keratin duh

  • also used as protection/barrier

location - oral cavity, oesophagus

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9
Q

simple cuboidal

A

square cells + round nuceli
one layer thick

used for secretion and absorption

location - forms glands, found in kidney tubules

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10
Q

simple columnar

A

tall cells + oval nuclei usually basally located
one layer

used for absorption + secretion

found in GI tract
(some areas have suraface mods e.g. microvilli in small intestine)

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11
Q

pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium w/goblet cells

A

tall cells
appear stratified - all touch the basement membran but NOT ALL reach the lumen/surface

usually modified w/ cillia and goblet cells

used as mucocilliary escalator

found in trachea & large respiratory airways
(SPECIFIC TO RESPIRATORY TRACT)

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12
Q

Intercellular junctions, what proteoglycans bind cells together in epithelial cells?

A

specialised areas of cell memb that bind one cell to another

  • desmosomes
  • hemidesmosomes
  • tight junctions
  • gap junctions
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13
Q

desmosomes

A
  • very strong connections between adjacent cells
  • resist stretching and twisting
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14
Q

hemidesmosomes

A

attach cells to basement memb
- act as stabaliser and anchor cell to tissue

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15
Q

tight junctions

A
  • proteins that interlock between cells
  • found near apical edge
  • prevents passage of water & solutes BETWEEN CELLS
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16
Q

gap junctions

A
  • memb proteins interlock
  • contains central pore
  • allows movemne tof small molecules, ions between cells

found in cardiac muscle

17
Q

connective tissues: functions, main cells and extracellular matrix components

A

functions:
- structural framework
- supports, surrounds, interconnects other tissue types
- protect delicate organs
- trasport fluids/dissolved mat
- energy reserves
- defend body from microorganisms

always consist of cells within extracellular matrix

main cells:
- fibroblasts = cell type that sythesizes extracellular matrix
- adipocytes, macrophages, mast cells

extracellular matrix made up of:
- ground substance with tissue fluid in it
- has fibres : collagen and/or elastic

18
Q

classification of connecitive tissues

A
  • specialised connective tissue
  • connective tissue proper
19
Q

specialised connective tissue

A

e.g. blood (blood cells in plasma (extracellular fluid)
bone (bone cells in background matrix (hardened w/ Ca and Phosphate, but still counts as extracellular fluid)
cartilage (condrocytes - in matrix as well)

20
Q

connective tissue proper classification

A

classified according to
type, arrangement, abundance of the fibres, cells and ground substance

Loose arelolar (aka loose irregular)
dense irregular
dense regular

21
Q

Loose arelolar

A
  • lots of ground substance
  • few fibres (e.g. collagen, elastic)
    many types:
  • fibroblasts (secrete hylouronan + proteins)
  • adipocytes (fat cells, contain lipid droplet)
  • macrophages (immune response)
  • found under epithelium that lines surfaces
22
Q

dense irregular connective tissue

A
  • little ground substance
  • many collagen fibre bundles arranged randomly
    few cell types:
  • mainly fibroblasts
  • resists stretching and distension due to all of the collagen fibres

found in dermis of skin

23
Q

dense regular connective tissue

A
  • little ground substance
  • many densley packed collagen fibres in PARALLEL rows
  • few cell types:
    mainly fibroblasts

found in tendons and ligaments
cuz quite regular tension that needs to be resisted

24
Q

Muscle tissue: function, types

A

produces movement, specialised for contraction

  • skeletal
  • smooth
  • cardiac

similarities between ^ these 3:
- all elongated parallel to axis of contraction
- numerous mitochondria
- contractile elements

25
Q

skeletal muscle

A
  • moves, stabilises the skeleton
  • forms sphincters in digestive or urinary tracts (e.g. bumhole contracts to stop poop)
  • involved in respiration (contraction relaxation of sutff)
  • long cylinderical cells
  • striated (look striped)
  • multinucleated ( cuz so long, usually at periphery of cell)
  • innervated by somatic nervous system
26
Q

xsmooth muscle

A
  • located in organs, blood vessels, airways
  • responsible for GI movement (peristalsis)
  • alters diameter of airways and blood vessels (e.g. if u want to inc blood vessel by contricting, smooth muscle constricts)
  • short, fusiform (ie spindle shaped)
  • non striated
  • single nucleus in the middle
  • innervated by autonomic nervous system
27
Q

cardiac muscle

A
  • found in heart fall
  • circulates blood, maintains BP
  • branched muscle fibres
  • striated
  • 1 or 2 central nuclei
  • cells are joined by interclated discs joined by gap junctions
  • innervated by autonomic nervous system
28
Q

what is transitional epithelium

A

aka urothelium
foud in stratified epithelium
appears cuboidal when relaxed and squamous when stretched
e.g. found in bladder