Cells and Tissues
Cells and Tissues
Cells and Tissues
HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY
AN INTEGRATED APPROACH
Dee Unglaub Silverthorn, Ph.D.
Chapter 3
Cells and Tissues
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Overview: Cells to Organ Systems
• Cytosol
• Organelles
• Inclusion
• Dissolved
• Insoluble
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Figure 3-3: A map for the study of cell structure
Nonmenbranous Organelles
• Ribosomes
• Free
• Fixed
• Protein synthesis
• Vaults:
• large nucleoprotein particles (mostly protein) which have
39 fold symmetery.
• 3X the size of ribosomes and are present in many types of
eukaryotic cells, Highly conserved among eukaryotes.
• Precise function unknown but they may play a role in
protein synthesis; in transport of mRNA to cytoplasm, and
may play a role in fighting pathogens
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Nonmenbranous Organelles
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Cummings Figure 3-9: Mitochondria
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Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) ad Ribosomes
• Smooth ER: Lipid synthesis & conversion
• Rough ER: Ribosomes, protein assembly &
transport vesicles
• Protein packaging
• Secretory vesicles
• Secreted to E C F
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Golgi Apparatus
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Figure 3-11: The Golgi apparatus
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Cytoplasmic Vesicles
• Lysosomes
• Enzymes
• Intracellular
digestion
• Peroxisomes
• Hydrogen
peroxide
• Detoxification
• Fatty acid
degradation
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Figure 3-12: Lysosomes and peroxisomes
Nucleus
• Nuclear envelope
• Nuclear pore complex
• Chromatin
• DNA form genes
• Nucleoli
• DNA concentrations
• Control rRNA synthesis
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Nucleus
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Figure 3-13: The nucleus
Overview: Cells to Organ Systems
•A membrane is essentially a
hydrophobic permeability barrier
consisting of phospholipids,
glycolipids, and membrane proteins Polar
head
•Membranes contain amphipathic Nonpolar
molecules such as phosphatidyl tail
ethanolamine, an example of
phosphoglycerides, the major class
of membrane phospholipids in most
cells.
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Cell Junctions:
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Cummings Figure 3-14: Types of cell junctions
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Key Junction Proteins:
Connexin, cadherins, occludin & integrins
• Cell to cell
• Gap junctions: between heart muscle cells
• Tight junctions: blood brain barrier
• Anchoring junctions:
• Desmosomes- attach to intermediate
filaments of cytoskeleton
• Adherens Junctions- link actin in adjacent
cells
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Junctions
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Types of Anchoring Junctions
• Cell- Cell Anchoring Junctions:
Adherens Junction- links actin in adjacent cells
and
Desmosomes- attach to intermediate filaments of
cytoskeleton
• Cell-Matrix Anchoring Junctions:
--Focal adhesions- bind intracellular actin to
different matrix proteins such as fibronectin
--Hemidesmosomes- strong junctions
that anchor intermediate fibers of the
cytoskeleton to matrix proteins such as laminin
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Cytoskeleton
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Cytoskeleton
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Figure 3-7: The cytoskeleton and cytoplasmic protein fibers
Cytoskeleton
• Strength
• Support
• Shape
• Transport
• Cell to cell links
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Cytoskeleton
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The Centrosome
• The centrosome is located in the cytoplasm usually close to
the nucleus.
• It consists of two centrioles — oriented at right angles to
each other — embedded in a mass of amorphous material
containing more than 100 different proteins.
• It is duplicated during S phase of the cell cycle.
• Just before mitosis, the two centrosomes move apart until
they are on opposite sides of the nucleus.
• As mitosis proceeds, microtubules grow out from each
centrosome with their plus ends growing toward the
metaphase plate. These clusters of microtubules are called
spindle fibers.
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Centrosomes and Centrioles
• Centrosomes are the microtubule organizing centers
• Centrioles: bundles of microtubules
• Centrioles are built from a cylindrical bundle of 27 microtubules
arranged in nine triplets.
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Cummings Figure 3-8a,c: Centrioles, cilia, and flagella
Cilia and Flagella
• Motor proteins
• 2:9 microtubule pattern
• Cilia move fluids
• Flagella move sperm cell
• The chains are long, linear carbohydrate polymers that are negatively
charged under physiological conditions, due to the occurrence of sulfate
and uronic acid groups. Proteoglycans occur in the connective tissue.
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Cell Membrane Proteins
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Primary Tissue Types
• Tissue defined: A collection of cells usually held
together by cell junctions that works together to
achieve a common purpose
• Amount of Extracellular Matrix in a tissue is
highly variable
• Tissue types
• Epithelial
• Connective
• Muscle
• Nervous
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Epithelial Tissue
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Epithelial Tissues
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Figure 3-17: Distribution of epithelia in the body
Exchange Epithelial Tissues
• Leaky junctions
• Rapid transport
• Oxygen
• Carbon dioxide
• Ions & fluids
• Capillaries
• Lung alveoli
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More Epithelia
• Transport epithelium
• Intestinal microvili
• Tight junctions
• Ciliated epithelium
• Trachea
• Sweep mucous out
• Protective epithelium
• Skin
• Multiple cell layers
• Prevent exchange Figure 3-18b: Movement of substances across tight
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and leaky epithelia
More Epithelia
• Ciliated epithelium
• Trachea
• Sweep mucous out
• Protective epithelium
• Skin
• Multiple cell layers
• Prevent exchange
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Figure 3-19a: Ciliated epithelia
Secretory Epithelia
• Exocrine tissues
• Mucous glands- goblet cells
• Sweat glands
• Secreted externally
• Endocrine tissues
• Hormones
• Secreted to ECF & blood
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Secretory Epithelia
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Connective Tissue
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Connective Tissues (CT)
• Matrix
• Fibers & their functions
• Fibroblast cells
• Collagen
• Elastin
• Fibrillin
• Fibronectin
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Connective Tissues (CT)
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More Connective Tissues
• Dense
connective
tissue
• Tendons &
ligaments
• Collagen
dominates
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Supporting Connective Tissues
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Figure 3-25: Map of the components of connective tissue
Muscle and Nerve
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Muscle Tissues
• Contractile
• Force
• Movement
• Excitable- they
conduct signals
• Types
• Cardiac
• Smooth
• Skeletal
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Cummings Figure 12-1: Three types of muscles
Nervous Tissues
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Figure 8-2: Model neuron
Cell Life, Death, and Replacement
• Necrosis
• Damaged cells die
• Disrupt/kill neighbors
• Apoptosis
• Normal cell replacement
• Programmed cell death
• Does not damage neighbors
• Stem cells
• Role in cell replacement
• Research uses and potential
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Apoptosis
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Organs:
Focus on the Skin, the Body’s Largest Organ
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Functions of skin
• Protection
• Cushions and insulates and is waterproof
• Protects from chemicals, heat, cold, bacteria
• Screens UV
• Synthesizes vitamin D with UV
• Regulates body heat
• Prevents unnecessary water loss
• Sensory reception (nerve endings)
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Remember…
• Four basic types of tissue
• Epithelium – epidermis
• Connective tissue - dermis
• Muscle tissue
• Nervous tissue
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Epidermis
• Keratinized stratified squamous epithelium
• Four types of cells
• Keratinocytes – deepest, produce keratin (tough fibrous protein)
• Melanocytes - make dark skin pigment melanin
• Merkel cells – associated with sensory nerve endings
• Langerhans cells – macrophage-like dendritic cells
• Layers (from deep to superficial)
• Stratum basale or germinativum – single row of cells attached to
dermis; youngest cells
• Stratum spinosum – spinyness is artifactual; tonofilaments
(bundles of protein) resist tension
• Stratum granulosum – layers of flattened keratinocytes producing
keratin (hair and nails made of it also)
• Stratum lucidum (only on palms and soles)
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• Stratum corneum – horny layer (cells dead, many layers thick)
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Epithelium: layers (on left) and cell types (on right)
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Dermis
• Strong, flexible connective tissue: your “hide”
• Cells: fibroblasts, macrophages, mast cells,
WBCs
• Fiber types: collagen, elastic, reticular
• Rich supply of nerves and vessels
• Critical role in temperature regulation (the
vessels)
• Two layers (see next slides)
• Papillary – areolar connective tissue; includes dermal
papillae
• Reticular – “reticulum” (network) of collagen and
reticular fibers
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*Dermis layers *Dermal papillae
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Hypodermis
• Dermal tissues
• Loose CT
• Fibers & muscles
• Hair, sweat glands
• Sebaceous glands
• Hypodermal tissues
• Blood vessels
• Nerves
• Adipose & loose CT
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Summary