This document contains histology slides from Biology 131 - Anatomy and Physiology. It describes and images various types of tissues including epithelial, muscle, nerve, and connective tissues. Key points covered include the characteristics and functions of simple and stratified epithelial tissues, and the three main types of muscle tissue. Descriptions are also provided of different connective tissues like blood, cartilage, bone, and adipose tissue. References for further information are listed at the end.
2. Epithelial Tissues
No intercellular matrix.
Avascular
Contains nerve endings
Lie on a basement
membrane.
Able to undergo mitosis.
Develop from all three fetal
tissues.
One surface of cells is
exposed to a space or cavity.
8. Epithelial Tissues
Stratified Squamous
When you are
looking at a stratified
epithelium, to identify
the shape of the cells
always look at the
top most layer.
Stratified Squamous
Epithelium is either
keratinized or non-
keratinized
10. Muscle Tissue
Smooth Muscle
Myocytes lack visible
striations.
Smooth muscle is
located in visceral
organs.
Smooth muscle is
involuntary muscle.
11. Muscle Tissue
Skeletal Muscle
Myocytes are
multinucleated.
Myocytes run entire
length of muscle.
Myocytes are
striated.
Skeletal muscle is
voluntary muscle.
12. Muscle Tissue
Cardiac Muscle
Myocardial cells are short
and branched.
Myocardial cells are
striated.
Myocardial cells are
joined by intercalated
disks (note arrow in
picture).
Cardiac muscle is
involuntary muscle.
13. Nerve Tissue
Neuron
Contains cell body,
axon and dendrites.
In this slide you can
see the cell body of a
neuron and the area
of an axon, called the
axon hillock, where
the axon attaches to
the cell body (note
arrow).
14. Connective Tissue
Blood
Fluid connective
tissue.
Contains leukocytes
and erythrocytes
Green arrows point
to neutrophils.
Blue arrow points to
a monocyte.
Platelets and
erythrocytes are
also visible.
15. Connective Tissue
Hyaline Cartilage
Most abundant cartilage.
Located in most joints.
Precursor to most long
bones of body.
Note how cells of
hyaline cartilage ‘bunch
up’.
Note how chondrocytes
‘shrink’ away from their
lacunae (pockets within
semisolid intercellular
matrix of cartilage) –
characteristic of
cartilage.
16. Connective Tissue
Elastic Cartilage
In order to see
elastic proteins in
elastic cartilage a
special stain is used.
Elastic fibers will stain
gray to black in color.
17. Connective Tissue
Fibrocartilage
Primarily located in
intervertebral disks
and pubic
symphysis.
Note how
chondrocytes tend to
line up.
Compared to a
herring bone
pattern.
21. Connective Tissue
Connective Tissue
Proper
Dense Regular
Connective Tissue
Collagen fibers run
parallel to one
another.
Note cells of dense
regular c.t., called
fibrocytes, are located
between collagen
fibers.
26. References
Integumentary System
www.udel.edu/Biology/wags/histopage/colorpage/cin/cin.htm
The JayDoc HistoWeb, University of Kansas Medical Center,
1996
www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anaotmy/histoweb/index
.htm
Compact Bone Histology
www.cellbio/utmb.edu/microanatomy/bone/compact_bone_hi
stology.htm
General Histology Images, USC School of Dentistry
www.usc.edu/hsc/dental/ghisto