Connective Tissue Flashcards

1
Q

Derived from what embryonic tissue?

A

mesenchyme (middle germ layer)

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2
Q

ground substance

A

amorphous gel like substance. Part of extracellular matrix.

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3
Q

Components of ground substance (3)

A

Glycosaminoglycans (GAG), proteoglycans, adhesive glycoproteins

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4
Q

Glycosaminoglycans (GAG)

A

long inflexible unbranched polysaccharides

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5
Q

proteoglycans

A

proteins and GAG. attracts water to make tissue bulky and resist compression/pressure. Slow movement of cells.

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6
Q

Adhesive glycoproteins

A

large macromolecules with cell surface proteins (integrins). Fastens tissue components together.

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7
Q

Collagen

A

most prevalent protein in body. Forms various structures for different functions (cables, sheets, etc)

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8
Q

Collagen type 1

A

Location: dermis of skin, bone, capsules of organs, fibrocartilage, dentin, cementum, tendons. (places where there is siginificant force and tension.

Function: resists tension and pull

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9
Q

Collagen type II

A

Location: hyaline and elastic cartilage

Function: resistance to pressure

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10
Q

Collagen type III

A

AKA reticular collagen

Location: reticular fibers of spleen, liver, cardiovascular system, lungs, skin. (In organs having structural framework)

Function: structural support

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11
Q

Collagen type IV

A

Location: basal lamina (structure associated with epithelial cells)

Function: support and filtration

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12
Q

Collagen type V

A

Location: fetal tissues, placenta, dermis, bone, most interstitial tissues

Function: associated with type 1

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13
Q

Collagen type VII

A

Location: skin

Function: anchors epidermal basal lamina to underlying dermis

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14
Q

Collagen groups based on structures formed:

A

Fibrillar collagens: types I, II, III. Have subunits that aggregate to form large fibrils (can see on electron or light microscope)

Sheet forming collagens: type IV. To do with basement membrane. Subunits produced by epithelial cells. Major structural proteins of external laminae and basal lamina in epithelia

Linking/anchoring collagens (type VII): short collagens that link fibrillar collagens to one another and to components of ECM

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15
Q

Elastic fibers

A

seen mostly in organs subject to bending/stretching

thinner than type 1 collagen. Form sparse network interspersed with collagen bundles

protein cross link holds elastin aggregates together

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16
Q

Reticular fibers

A

mostly type III collagen

narrow, branching, don’t bundle

17
Q

Stroma

A

scaffolding/framework. Supporting tissue of epithelial organ, tumor, gonads

18
Q

Select fixed/resident cells

A

stay in connective tissue their whole lives

19
Q

Connective tissue cellular components (6)

A

Fibroblasts, active fibroblasts, inactive fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, adiposytes, pericytes

20
Q

Fibroblasts

A

originate locally from mesenchymal cells. Most abundant cell type. Active or quiescent state (fibrocytes)

21
Q

active fibroblasts

A

found in close association with collagen bundles. elongated fusiform cells. Large, granular, ovoid nucleus; well defined nucleolus.

22
Q

inactive fibrobalst

A

smaller than active. May differentiate into adipose cells, chrondrocytes, osteoblasts (under extreme stress/trauma)

23
Q

myofibroblasts

A

modified fibroblasts that demonstrate characteristics of both fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells. Not easily distinguishable by LM. Abundant where wound healing takes place. Also in periodontal ligament. Bundles of actin filaments and dense bodies similar to those of smooth muscle cells.

24
Q

Adipocytes

A

fully differentiated cells, function in synthesis, storage, and release of fat. Found throughout body in loose CT, concentrated along blood vessels. Masses form adipose tissue (15-20% of body weight)

25
Q

Adipocytes of white fat

A

large spherical cells, polyhedral when in adipose tissue. Store fat in single droplet. Unicellular. Energy reserve

26
Q

Adipocytes of brown fat

A

brown fat cells smaller and more polygonal than white fat. Stores fat in several small droplets. Lots of mitochondria so stains darker than white fat. Multicellular. Thermogenic, lose after infancy

27
Q

pericytes

A

surround endothelial cells of capillaries and small venules. Have characteristics of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells. Long processes coming off that associate with small capillaries

28
Q

Transient cells

A

Come and go from CT. Plasma cells, leukocytes, macrophages, immune cells

29
Q

Functions of CT (4)

A
  • structural support
  • medium for nutrient exchange
  • aiding in defense and protection of body (via immune cells and ‘cushioning’)
  • site for fat storage
30
Q

Mesenchyme

A

derived mainly from mesoderm. Loosly packed stem cells in gel like extracellular matrix.

31
Q

Loose CT

A

abundant ground substance, below lining of internal body cavity. Surrounds parenchyma of glands. Very pliable and flexible

32
Q

Lamina propria

A

loost CT in GI tract that allows nutrients to diffuse to epithelium

33
Q

Dense irregular CT

A

abundant collagen fibers, resistant to stress, tightly packed and not well organized.

location: dermis of skin, lymph node capsule

34
Q

Dense regular CT (2 types)

A

Collagenous: abundant collagen fibers organized in parallel cylinders along lines of force/stress. Resistent to tensile stress.
Location: tendons, ligaments.

Elastic: abundant elastic fibers in parallel to form thin sheets. Resistant to tensile stress.
Location: large blood vessles