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Bio CHP 7 Sem 1

Animal tissues are organized into four main types - epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous tissue. Epithelial tissues cover the outside of the body and line internal organs. Connective tissues provide structure and connect body parts. Muscle tissues are responsible for movement. Nervous tissues detect stimuli and coordinate responses. The characteristics and functions of each tissue type are described in more detail.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views

Bio CHP 7 Sem 1

Animal tissues are organized into four main types - epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous tissue. Epithelial tissues cover the outside of the body and line internal organs. Connective tissues provide structure and connect body parts. Muscle tissues are responsible for movement. Nervous tissues detect stimuli and coordinate responses. The characteristics and functions of each tissue type are described in more detail.

Uploaded by

Aliaa Akbar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 7

TISSUES
State & define
terminologies in
tissues

LESSON
OUTCOMES Identify, draw, label &
describe the
characteristics of
animals & plants
tissues
• Epithelial • Meristem
ANIMAL

PLANT
• Shape • Apical
• Thickness • Lateral
Anatomy &
• Connective
• Loose Connective Tissue
• Ground
• Parenchyma
Physiology
• Fibrous Connective Tissues
• Adipose tissue
• Collenchyma
• Sclerenchyma
• Bone • Vascular
• Hyaline cartilage • Xylem
• Blood • Phloem
• Muscle • Epidermis
• Skeletal • Dermal
• Smooth • Epidermis
• Cardiac • Bark
• Nervous
• Sensory neuron
• Interneuron
• Motor neuron
What is anatomy?
• ANATOMY: study of the structure of
organisms… looking at cells, tissues
• (Morphology: Study of form)

What is physiology?
• PHYSIOLOGY: study of the function of
cells, tissues, organs of living things;
and the physics/chemistry of these functions…
Always keep in mind that in anatomy,
morphology & physiology…

“Structure correlates to
function”
7.1 ANIMAL TISSUES
❖ All animals are multicelled, with
cells joined by cell junctions

❖ Typically, cells are organized in


Key Concepts four tissue types: epithelial
Animal tissue, connective tissue, muscle
Organization tissue, and nervous tissue

❖ Organs, which consist of a


combination of tissues, interact
in organ systems
▪ Tissue
▪ Interacting cells and
extracellular substances that
carry out one or more
specialized tasks

Organization
of Animal ▪ Organ
▪ Structural unit of two or more
Bodies tissues organized in a specific
way to carry out specific tasks

▪ Organ systems
▪ Two or more organs and
other components interacting
in a common task
▪ Body parts must interact to
perform many tasks
▪ Coordinate and control individual
parts
▪ Acquire and distribute raw materials
Homeostasis in to cells and dispose of wastes
▪ Protect tissues against injury or
Animals attack
▪ Reproduce, nourish and protect
offspring through early growth and
development
▪ Maintain the internal environment
(homeostasis)
▪ Tight junctions
▪ So close that are sometimes impermeable
▪ Prevent fluid from seeping between epithelial
cells; fluid must pass through cells

▪ Adhering junctions
▪ Transmembrane linker proteins
Animal Cells are ▪ Hold cells together at distinct spots
United by Cell
Junctions ▪ Desmosomes
▪ Anchoring junctions
▪ Filaments anchor to the opposite side

▪ Gap junctions
▪ Permit ions and small molecules to pass from
cytoplasm of one cell to another
• Tight junctions
– So close that are sometimes
impermeable
• Adherens junctions
– Transmembrane linker
proteins
• Desmosomes
– Anchoring junctions
– Filaments anchor to the
opposite side
• Gap junctions
– Allow small molecules to
move between cells
▪ Epithelial tissue covers the outside
of the body and lines organs and
cavities within the body

▪ Connective tissue provides support


and connects body parts
4 Main Types of
Animal Tissues ▪ Muscle tissue responsible for
contraction and moves the body and
its parts

▪ Nervous tissue detects internal and


external stimuli and coordinates
responses
1.Epithelial Tissue
▪ Epithelium (epithelial tissue)
▪ A sheet of cells that covers the body’s outer surface and lines its internal
ducts and cavities
▪ Roles: as interfaces and as boundaries
▪ Functions:
Protection Absorption
Sensory reception Ion transport
Secretion Filtration
Formation of slippery surfaces for movement

▪ Basement membrane
▪ A secreted extracellular matrix that attaches the epithelium to the
underlying tissue
▪ Microvilli
▪ Fingerlike projections of absorptive epithelia
General
Structure of
Simple
Epithelium
▪ Thickness
▪ Simple epithelium: One cell thick
▪ Stratified epithelium: More than one
cell thick
Describing
Epithelial ▪ Cell shape
Tissues ▪ Squamous: Flattened, wider than
tall
▪ Cuboidal: Cube-shaped, as tall as
wide
▪ Columnar: Column-shaped, taller
than wide
where diffusion is important

where tissues are


involved in secretion
and absorption:
larger cells because
of the machinery of
production,
packaging, and
energy requirements
“ciliated” literally =
eyelashes
(see next page)
Stratified: regenerate from below
Rare…
Rare…
▪ Glands
▪ Organs that release substances onto
the skin, or into a body cavity or
interstitial fluid

▪ Exocrine glands (glands with


Glandular ducts)
▪ Deliver secretions to an external or
Epithelium internal surface (saliva, milk, earwax,
digestive enzymes)

▪ Endocrine glands (no ducts)


▪ Secrete hormones which are carried
in blood
Exocrine glands
unicellular or multicellular

Unicellular:
goblet cell scattered within
epithelial lining of
intestines and
respiratory tubes

Product: mucin
- mucus is mucin & water
Multicellular:
Epithelium-walled
duct and a
secretory unit
Examples of exocrine gland products

▪ Many types of mucus secreting glands


▪ Sweat glands of skin
▪ Oil glands of skin
▪ Salivary glands of mouth
▪ Liver (bile)
▪ Pancreas (digestive enzymes)
▪ Mammary glands (milk)
Endocrine glands

▪ Ductless glands

▪ Release hormones into extracellular space


▪ Hormones are messenger molecules

▪ Hormones enter blood and travel to


specific target organs
▪ Connective tissues consist
of cells and the extracellular
matrix they secrete

2. Connective
▪ Connective tissues connect
Tissues body parts and provide
structural and functional
support to other body tissues
▪ Loose connective tissue
▪ Fibroblasts secrete a matrix of
complex carbohydrates with
fibers dispersed widely through
the matrix
Soft Connective
Tissues
▪ Dense connective tissue
(dense collagen fibers)
▪ Dense irregular: Supports skin,
internal organs
▪ Dense regular: Ligaments and
tendons
▪ Cartilage: Rubbery extracellular
matrix, supports and cushions
bones

Specialized ▪ Adipose tissue: Fat filled cells,


Connective stores energy, cushions and
Tissues protect organs

▪ Bone: Rigid support, muscle


attachment, protection, mineral
storage, blood production
Summary of soft connective
tissue
Summary of specialized
connective tissue
▪ Muscle tissue is made up
of cells that contract when
stimulated, requires ATP
energy
3. Muscle
Tissues
▪ Skeletal muscle tissue
▪ Moves the skeleton (voluntary)
▪ Long, striated cells with many
nuclei

Three Types of ▪ Cardiac muscle tissue


Muscle Tissues ▪ Heart muscle (involuntary)
▪ Striated cells with single nuclei

▪ Smooth muscle tissue


▪ In walls of hollow organs
(involuntary)
▪ No striations, single nuclei
▪ Nervous tissue
▪ Consists of specialized
signaling cells (neurons)
and cells that support them
4. Nervous (neuroglial cells)
Tissue
▪ Nervous tissue detects
internal and external
stimuli, and coordinates
responses to stimuli
▪ Neurons
▪ Excitable cells with long cytoplasmic
extensions called axons
▪ Send and receive electrochemical
signals

▪ Three types of neurons


▪ Sensory neurons are excited by specific
stimuli
Neurons ▪ Interneurons integrate sensory
information
▪ Motor neurons relay commands from
brain and spinal cord to muscles and
glands
▪ Glia/ glial cells
▪ help nourish, insulate, and replenish
neurons, and in some cases, modulate
neuron function.
4 Types of Animal
Tissues
Coordination of
Nervous Tissue
and Skeletal
Muscle

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