290 likes | 352 Vues
Tissues & Junctions. Lecture 34 Chapter 21 - Part 1. A) TISSUES. What is tissue?. Biological tissue is a collection of similar cells and the intercellular substances surrounding them. There are four basic kinds of tissue in the body: epithelium connective tissues
E N D
Tissues & Junctions Lecture 34 Chapter 21 - Part 1
What is tissue? • Biological tissue is a collection of • similar cells • and the intercellular substances surrounding them. • There are four basic kinds of tissue in the body: • epithelium • connective tissues • including adipose tissue, blood, bone, and cartilage • muscle tissue • nerve tissue
With most multicellular organisms there are different types of cells, which are organized in to discrete groupings called tissues 21_02_tissues.jpg
Plant cells produce a primary cell wall followed by a secondary cell wall. The cell wall - which is on the outside of the plasma membrane - is made of cellulose - a polysaccharide 21_05_model_plantwall.jpg
The cell wall will only allow the cell to grow in one direction, which is dependant upon the orientation of the fibers that were laid down during the production of the primary cell wall. 21_06_cellulose.jpg A) Here the plant tissue may only expand in a vertical direction B) Here the plant tissue may only expand in a horizontal direction
21_07_Microtubules.jpg The celulose synthase complex, that is embedded in the plasma membrane, oozes out cellulose microfibrils
Animals have just 4 classes of tissue - connective, epithelial, nervous, and muscular (the last three are basically similar). 21_08_Extracellu_matrix.jpg Animal cells do not use cellulose. They instead have a protein extracellular matrix of collagen, which has great tensile strength.
Collagen is made of many bundles of a simple polypeptide 21_09_Collagen_fibrils.jpg
21_11_elastic_skin.jpg Mutations in the arrangement of these fibers may result in various abnormal outcomes.
Fibroblasts are the cells that secrete collagen and also the ones that maintain it. 21_13_align_collagen.jpg
21_14_Integrins_link.jpg How are cells held together? The interlinks between cells is made between collagen fibers and the actin filaments of cells using transmembrane and adaptor proteins known as integrins Fibronectin - is a linker protein
21_17_epithelial_sheet.jpg Epithelial sheets and cell-cell junctions
21_18_sheet_polarized.jpg Most tissue cells have a polarized structure. They rest on the basal lamina. The basal lamina is just a layer of type IV collagen, plus other molecules. Lung Tissue
The intestine is made of two main cell types. The absorptive cells take in nutrients and the goblet cells secrete mucus. 21_20_polarize_line_gut.jpg
21_21_cell_cell_junction.jpg Animal cells are held together by a number of types of cell-cell junctions. a) Tight Junctions - b) Adherens junction - c) desmosomes d) gap juctions - e) hemidesmosomes
Tight junctions prevent the passage of solutes between cells. They also allow the cell to maintain discrete types of plasma membrane regions 21_22_Tight_junctions.jpg
Tight junctions consist of proteins, for example, claudins, occludins and junctional adhesion molecules that are anchored in the membranes of two adjacent cells and interact with each other to hold the cells together and prevent other molecules from passing between them.
Adheren junctions and desmosome junctions are build on a common theme - they make use of transmembrane proteins that belong to the cadherin family - these molecules from adjacent cells link directly to each other. 21_23_Cadherin.jpg actin or intermediate filament
Adheren junctions form large deposits as belts permitting adjacent cells to transmit mechanical forces 21_24_Adherens_junct.jpg
21_25_tube_or_vesicle.jpg Vital part in development
21_26_Desmosomes.jpg Desmosomes
21_27_Hemidesmosome.jpg Hemidesmosomes
Gap junctions permit the free passage of small ions and small water soluble molecules to pass. However, they can be closed on demand. Plants have these too.
A little perspective… The Inner Life of a Cell - Short Version Annotated Version